Google is adding another layer of testing for Chrome updates
A new “early stable” release will be available to a small group of people one week earlier than the scheduled stable release date. | Illustration by Alex Castro / The VergeGoogle is changing the release cycle for its Chrome...
Google is changing the release cycle for its Chrome web browser, the company announced in a blog post, adding a new early preview of updates available via the Stable channel for a small set of users starting in February 2023. This early stable release will be available one week before the scheduled stable release date, allowing Google to address any reported issues before updates are rolled out to the wider public (via Android Police).
Chrome’s release cycle currently pushes updates to the Google Chrome Canary channel first (an experimental version of the browser used for testing unstable code), then to the Dev, Beta, and Stable channels, in that order. The new early stable release sits between the Beta channel testing and the final stable release and is intended to uncover issues that slipped through other testing phases.
Google Chrome v110 will be the first version of the browser to follow the new release schedule. Chrome v110 is already available in both Canary and Dev channels and will be released for Beta on January 12th before pushing to the early stable version on February 1st (the original stable release date). The full stable release for Chrome v110 is now scheduled for February 7th, 2023.