Chromium Blog: A Tale of Two Pwnies (Part 1)
Just over two months ago, Chrome sponsored the Pwnium browser hacking competition. We had two fantastic submissions, and successfully blocked both exploits within 24 hours of their unveiling. Today,...
View ArticleChromium Vulnerability Rewards Program: larger rewards!
The Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program was created to help reward the contributions of security researchers who invest their time and effort in helping us make Chromium more secure.
View ArticleA better developer experience for Native Client
Native Client (NaCl) enables you to write high-performance apps that run your C and C++ code in the browser. With the new Native Client add-in for Microsoft Visual Studio and the new Native Client...
View ArticleDo more with Chrome Developer Tools
Today, we take this feature one step further by introducing device emulation support in Chrome Developer Tools. Device emulation includes, among other things, native User Agent and dimension overriding
View ArticleIntroducing TCP Listen, a new API for Chrome packaged apps
Chrome packaged apps aim to deliver an app experience with the appearance and capabilities of native apps, but built using the growing capabilities of HTML5. These apps can access APIs for better...
View ArticleBuild smoother web apps with Chrome Developer Tools
Whether your web app involves scrolling down a long list of news headlines or a game with flying birds and crumbling structures, you want your web app to look as smooth as native apps. It used to be...
View ArticleNative Client support on ARM
Native Client (NaCl) enables Chrome to run high-performance apps compiled from your C and C++ code. One of the main goals of Native Client is to be architecture-independent, so that all machines can...
View ArticleHello Firefox, this is Chrome calling!
For the first time, Chrome and Firefox can “talk” to each other via WebRTC. WebRTC is a new set of technologies that brings clear crisp voice, sharp high-definition (HD) video and low-delay...
View ArticleDart: Faster Editor and more
Today's release of the Dart SDK and Editor is the first beta release, and contains performance and productivity improvements across the platform. This latest release helps Dart developers automate code...
View ArticleSecurity rewards at Google: Two MEEELLION Dollars Later
One of Google’s core security principles is to engage the community, to better protect our users and build relationships with security researchers. We had this principle in mind as we launched our...
View ArticleChromium Blog: Announcing Octane 2.0
We created the Octane Benchmark Suite to measure how JavaScript engines perform on tasks that matter to users as well as motivate our own performance work on the V8 JavaScript engine. Today we’re...
View ArticleChromium Blog: Introducing the new Chrome Apps Developer Tool
Developers of Chrome Apps and extensions have long been familiar with the developer-mode setting of the chrome://extensions tab in the Chrome browser. This tab provides shortcuts for loading unpacked...
View ArticlePortable Native Client: The "pinnacle" of speed, security, and...
Native Client (NaCl) brings the performance and low-level control of native code to modern web browsers, without sacrificing the security benefits and portability of web applications.
View ArticleDart 1.0: A stable SDK for structured web apps
Today we’re releasing the Dart SDK 1.0, a cross-browser, open source toolkit for structured web applications. In the two years since we first announced Dart, we’ve been working closely with early...
View ArticleMaking the web faster with SPDY and HTTP/2
Four years ago we announced SPDY, an experimental protocol designed to make the web faster. It has matured quickly since then: it’s been adopted by Chrome, Opera, Firefox and Internet Explorer, dozens...
View ArticleA Chrome Experiment for the multi-device web
For the past few years, building multimedia web experiences for mobile devices has been difficult. Phones and tablets are less powerful than their counterparts, and mobile browsers have traditionally...
View ArticleEcma forms TC52 for Dart Standardization
This week Ecma created a new technical committee named TC52 to publish a standard specification of the Dart language. We’re excited about this milestone in the evolution of Dart and the web.
View ArticleCompiling in the background for a smoother user experience
We aim to make Chrome the fastest browser possible. One way V8 helps with this goal is by compiling JavaScript into native machine code to execute scripts quickly. Historically, Chrome compiled...
View ArticleChrome 34: Responsive Images and Unprefixed Web Audio
Today’s Chrome Beta channel release introduces a new HTML attribute for responsive images and the unprefixed version of the JavaScript Web Audio API. Unless otherwise noted, changes apply to desktop...
View ArticleWebP improves while rolling out across Google
The WebP team at Google focuses on making the web better through smaller, faster-loading images. We’ve seen that WebP compares favorably with other contemporary image formats, but our team has been...
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