Download Google Chrome 96.0.4664.45

Spread the love

Google has released version 96 of its Chrome web browser. Google Chrome is available for Windows, Linux and macOS. There are also versions for Android and iOS, but they follow a slightly different release schedule. New in version 96 is the so-called back forward cache, which should make navigating back to previously visited pages faster. Learn more about the changes made in this release, in addition to the usual bug and security fixescan be found below.

Preparing for a Three Digit Version Number

Next year, Chrome will release version 100. This will add a digit to the version number reported in Chrome’s user agent string. To help site owners test for the new string, Chrome 96 introduces a runtime flag that causes Chrome to return ‘100’ in its user agent string. This new flag called chrome://flags/#force-major-version-to-100 is available from Chrome 96 onward.

Origin Trials

This version of Chrome introduces the origin trials described below. Origin trials allow you to try new features and give feedback on usability, practicality, and effectiveness to the web standards community. To register for any of the origin trials currently supported in Chrome, including the ones described below, visit the Chrome Origin Trials dashboard† To learn more about origin trials in Chrome, visit the Origin Trials Guide for Web Developers† Microsoft Edge runs its own origin trials separate from Chrome. To learn more, see the Microsoft Edge Origin Trials Developer Console

New Origin Trials

Applications that capture other windows or tabs currently have no way to control whether the calling item or the captured item gets focus. (Think of a presentation feature in a video conference app.) Chrome 96 makes this possible with a subclass of MediaStreamTrack called FocusableMediaStreamTrack, which supports a new focus() method. Consider the following code:

stream = await navigator.mediaDevices.getDisplayMedia(); pay attention [track] = stream.getVideoTracks();

where formerly, getVideoTracks() would return an array of MediaStreamTrack objects, it now returns FocusableMediaStreamTrack objects. (Note that this is expected to change to BrowserCaptureMediaStreamTrack in Chrome 97. At the time of this writing, Canary already does this.)

To determine which display media gets focus, the next line of this code would call track.focus() with either “focus-captured-surface” to focus the newly captured window or tab, or with “no-focus-change” to keep the focus with the calling window. On Chrome 96 or later, you can step through our demo code to see this in action.

Priority Hints

Priority Hints introduces a developer-set “importance” attribute to influence the computed priority of a resource. Supported importance values ​​are “auto”, “low”, and “high”. Priority Hints indicate a resource’s relative importance to the browser, allowing more control over the order resources are loaded. Many factors influence a resource’s priority in browsers including type, visibility, and preload status of a resource.

Allow Simple Range Header Values ​​Without Preflight

Requests with simple range headers can now be sent without a preflight request† CORS requests can use the Range header in limited ways (only one valid range) without triggering a preflight request.

Back-forward Cache on Desktop

the back forward cache stores pages to allow for instant navigations to previously-visited pages after cross-site navigations.

Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy: credentialless

Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy has a new credentialless option that causes cross-origin no-cors requests to omit credentials (cookies, client certificates, etc.). Similarly to COEP:require-corp, it can enable cross-origin isolation.

Sites that want to continue using SharedArrayBuffer must opt-in to cross-origin isolation. Doing so using COEP: require-corp is difficult to deploy at scale and requires all subresources to explicitly opt-in. This is fine for some sites, but creates dependency problems for sites that gather content from users (Google Earth, social media generally, forums, etc).

C.S.S :autofill Pseudo Class

The new autofill pseudo class enables styling auto-filled form elements. This is a standardization of the :-webkit-autofill pseudo class which is already supported in WebKit. Firefox supports the standard version.

Disable Propagation of Body Style to Viewport when Contained

Some properties like writing-mode, direction, and backgrounds are propagated from body to the viewport. To avoid infinite loops for CSS Container Queries, the spec and implementation were changed to not propagate those properties when containment is applied to HTML or BODY.

font-synthesis Property

the font-synthesis CSS property controls whether user agents are allowed to synthesize oblique, bold, and small-caps font faces when a font family lacks faces.

EME MediaKeySession Closed Reason

the MediaKeySession.closed property now uses an enum to indicate the reason the MediaKeySession object closed. The closed property returns a Promise that resolves when the session closes. Where previously, the Promise simply resolved, it now resolves with a string indicating the reason for closing. The returned string will be one of “internal-error”, “closed-by-application”, “release-acknowledged”, “hardware-context-reset”, or “resource-evicted”.

HTTP to HTTPS Redirect for HTTPS DNS Records

Chrome will always connect to a website via HTTPS when an HTTPS record is available from the domain name service (DNS).

InteractionID in EventTiming

the PerformanceEventTiming interface now includes an attribute called interactiveID. This is a browser-generated ID that enables linking multiple PerformanceEventTiming entries when they correspond to the same user interaction. Developers can currently use the Event Timing API to gather performance data about events they care about. Unfortunately, it is hard to link events that correspond to the same user interaction. For instance, when a user taps, many events are generated, such as pointerdown, mousedown, pointerup, mouseup, and click.

New Media Query: prefers-contrast

Chrome supports a new media query called ‘prefers-contrast’, which lets authors adapt web content to the user’s contrast preference as set in the operating system (specifically, increased contrast mode on macOS and high contrast mode on Windows). Valid options are ‘more’, ‘less’, ‘custom’, or ‘no-preference’.

Unique id for Desktop PWAs

web app manifests now support an optional id field that globally identifies a web app. When the id field is not present, a PWA falls back to start_url. This field is currently only supported on desktop.

URL Protocol Handler Registration for PWAs

Enable web applications to register themselves as handlers of custom URL protocols/schemes using their installation manifest. Operating system applications often register themselves as protocol handlers to increase discoverability and usage. Web sites can already register to handle schemes via registerProtocolHandler()† The new feature takes this a step further by letting web apps be launched directly when a custom scheme link is invoked.

WebAssembly Content Security Policy

Chrome has enhanced Content Security Policy to improve interoperability with WebAssembly. The wasm-unsafe-eval controls WebAssembly execution (with no effect on JavaScript execution). Additionally, the script-src policies now include WebAssembly.

Reference Types

WebAssembly modules can now hold references to JavaScript and DOM objects† Specifically, they can be passed as arguments, stored in local and global variables, and stored in WebAssembly.Table objects.

Deprecations and Removals

This version of Chrome introduces the deprecations and removals listed below. Visit ChromeStatus.com for lists of current deprecations and previous removals

The “basic-card” Method of PaymentRequest API

the PaymentRequest API has deprecated the basic card payment method† Its usage is low and declining. It underperforms when compared to other payment methods in time-to-checkout and completion rate. Developers can switch to other payment methods as an alternative. Examples include Google Pay, Apple Pay, and Samsung Pay. Removal timeline:

  • Chrome 96: the basic-card method is deprecated in the Reporting API
  • Chrome 100: the basic card method will be removed.

Version number 96.0.4664.45
Release status Final
Operating systems Windows 7, Linux, macOS, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2012, Windows 10, Windows Server 2016, Windows 11
Website google
Download
License type Freeware
You might also like
Exit mobile version