Ahead of Chrome OS getting major updates every four weeks at the end of this month, Google today detailed the new six-month “long-term support” (LTS) channel for education and enterprise customers.
The Chrome OS LTS channel is intended for companies that manage a fleet of Chromebooks. As such, feature updates that can change the UI or user experience will occur “every six months rather than every four weeks.”
Devices that are on the LTS channel will continue to receive security updates as soon as they are available for maximum device protection.
Google is specifically targeting unattended kiosk devices, healthcare deployments, and online educational assessments that don’t need the latest capabilities. The company recommends that all other devices stick to four weeks to “ensure that users have the most feature-rich experience.”
It’s meant to be an alternative to IT pinning devices to specific stable releases, which don’t get security updates. Meanwhile, admins can now pin Chrome extensions and apps to a specific version and set a minimum OS version to block older devices and user sessions.
Starting with M96, customers will be able to easily transition from the LTS channel to the 4-week stable release cadence if desired by changing the device channel in the Google Admin console. This policy will be rolling out in the Google Admin console in the coming days.
Chrome OS 96 will start rolling out on Tuesday, November 30.
More on Chrome OS:
- Chrome OS virtual keyboard gaining dark theme, Unicode 14 emoji, Linux apps support
- Microsoft going after Chrome OS with Windows 11 SE and $249 Surface Laptop SE
- Hands-on: HP Chromebook X2 is pretty close to the ideal Chrome OS tablet, when it’s on sale
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