Google Chrome is a popular web browser that is used by millions of people around the world. It has been in use for over 10 years and has been constantly updated with new features and improvements. However, recent updates have caused some problems. For example, some users are reporting that their browsers are slowing down after updating to Chrome 57.0.2924x.x. This update includes a number of new features and improvements, but it also includes a number of security fixes. If you experience this problem, you can try to uninstall the update and then install it again using the Google Chrome Web Store’s installer tool. However, if you do not have the Google Chrome Web Store installed on your computer, you can also try to manually install the update by going to chrome://flags and changing the “enableWebRender” value to “true”.


Google Chrome was one of the first web browsers to ship new releases on a fixed schedule, which is part of the reason the version number is now in the triple digits. Google is now preparing to speed up Chrome’s update schedule yet again.

Google announced today that Chrome will ship new major updates every three weeks, with the first week of an update designated as “Early Stable.” The company said, “this early stable version will be released to a small percentage of users, with the majority of people getting the release a week later at the normal scheduled date, this will also be the date the new version is available from the Chrome download page.”

The last time Google changed Chrome’s release cycle in September 2021. Chrome 94 was the first version to arrive on a four-week schedule, instead of the previous six-week release cycle. Google said at the time, “shifting to a faster release cycle allows us to experiment and iterate on new features more effectively via origin trials, without having to wait as long between releases. It doesn’t mean we’ll be shipping more features, or shipping new features in less time.”

Google is hoping the new “Early Stable” stage will help identify lingering bugs and other issues before an update is rolled out to everyone. Trimming another week from Chrome’s development cycle could mean even fewer features arrive with each update, but an extra week of testing could result in fewer bugs for everyone.

Source: Chrome Developers