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June 3, 2014

Chrome goes 64-bit on Windows with promises of faster, safer web browsing

by John_A

Chrome Web Store on Windows

While many apps and operating systems made the jump to 64-bit code a while ago, Google’s Chrome browser is still stuck in a 32-bit world and misses out on much of what newer computers can offer. Today, though, it’s moving into the modern era: Google has released test versions of 64-bit Chrome for Windows 7 and 8 users. The upgrade lets the app take full advantage of newer processors and their instruction sets, delivering about a 25 percent speed boost for media-intensive pages. It also lets the software use newer security safeguards to minimize exploits, and there should be fewer crashes. There’s no word on corresponding Linux or Mac updates, but Windows fans willing to live dangerously can grab a 64-bit Canary or developer build through the source link.

Filed under: Internet, Software, Google

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Source: Chromium Blog

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