
So along with recently extending the Manifest V3 roll out timeline, we are improving the Chrome Web Store UI, updating extension documentation and samples, and adding new engagement surfaces in the Chrome side panel. We want to set developers investing in Chrome Extensions up for success. Chrome Extensions developers get more supportĮxtensions play a significant role in helping you deliver a more personalized experience to your web users while also reaching new ones. Like an annual release, for the entire web ecosystem.

And every year, we'll introduce Baseline 23, 24, 25…which will be a "cut" of everything that's new, and compatible across all browsers. By partnering with key players like MDN and, we will bring this common language and label directly into your workflow. Working in the W3C WebDX community group, we're establishing Baseline as the core set of features that are fully supported by the current and previous versions of all major browsers-Chrome, Edge, Firefox and Safari. Baseline brings more clarity and predictability to the web Thanks to some early work by JetBrains, Android developers building with Kotlin can now write their app features once, then use WebAssembly to deploy it to the web. WebAssembly brings Android apps to the webįor developers looking to make their code investments go further, WebAssembly's support for managed-memory languages like Kotlin and Dart unlocks a huge opportunity to reuse their existing codebase and reach users not only through their native apps but also on the web. The fact that WebGPU runs on the device (rather than in the cloud) also helps developers to save money, decrease latency, and build new privacy-preserving AI features. In fact, ML libraries like Tensorflow.js run 100 times faster on WebGPU than regular JavaScript, and WebGPU runs 3 times faster than WebGL (the previous gold standard for web graphics). This newly-available API unlocks the power of GPU hardware, and makes the web truly AI-ready. WebGPU advances AI and machine learning in the browser


Here are ten updates that we're particularly excited about, and please do send us your favorites (and your questions) at # 1. We're wrapping things up on this year's Google I/O, with more than 100 new APIs, components, and tools discussed on the keynote stage, and in Chrome's on-demand sessions.
