Skip to main content

Open-source code leaks indicate arrival of Google Play Store on Chromebooks

Acer Chromebook R11
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends
Many Android users are already very familiar with the Google Play Store as a means of downloading the latest apps, as well as other content like music, books, and video. Now, it seems that the storefront might soon be accessible on Chromebooks, too.

Over the weekend, a user called TheWiseYoda made a post to Reddit about a strange new addition to the Chromebook settings menu — a tickbox that would allow users to “Enable Android Apps to run on your Chromebook.” This intriguing option would apparently disappear shortly after the menu was opened.

Recommended Videos

Intrigued, TheWiseYoda and other users soon began pouring through code, and soon found even more concrete evidence that the Play Store would soon be made available to users on Chromebooks. Line 1214 of the open-source Chromium code, hosted here, confirms that the option to enable Android apps is indeed legitimate.

While Chromebooks can already run Android apps, opening up the Google Play Store would certainly make more of them available to users, and would streamline the process of obtaining them. More importantly, the fact that Google is implementing this roll-out now suggests that the company is happy with the way the content runs on Chromebook hardware.

It’s easy to see why both end users and Google would be eager to see the massive array of apps available from the Play Store brought to Chromebooks. However, a large amount of content that doesn’t perform well is perhaps likely to do more harm than good in the long run.

Given the nature of this leak, there’s no word on what sort of time frame we’re looking at before this functionality goes live. It wouldn’t be much of a surprise to see Google detail its plans for Play Store content on the Chromebook platform at the company’s I/O conference next month.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Google Screencast rethinks screen recordings on Chromebooks
google screencast rethinks screen recordings chrome os

Google wants you to rethink the way you do screen recordings on your Chromebook, especially when it comes to classroom and education scenarios.

Coming in ChromeOS 103 is a new system app known as Screencast, which can take what you record on your screen to a newer, more interactive level in more ways than one.

Read more
Google backs down, keeping cheaper way to date online intact
A user checks the dating app Tinder on a mobile phone.

Match Group, the maker of popular dating apps such as Tinder and Hinge, scored a victory in its tussle against Google over the Play Store’s taxation policy. The immediate impact for users is that they will continue to have the option of making in-app purchases from an external source and won’t be limited to the Play Store’s own billing system.

Google recently issued a directive that apps listed on its application repository will have to embrace the Play Store billing system. The aforementioned policy ensures that Google gets a 30% cut of all in-app purchases, which include subscriptions to the premium tiers of Match Group’s dating apps. Google had warned that apps that don’t agree to the policy by June won’t be able to push updates and risk being removed from the Play Store.

Read more
Google teases a true video editor for its Chromebooks
Luma Fusion Running on Chrome OS

Chromebooks might have better battery life, security, and performance when compared to MacBooks and Windows PCs, but video editing has always been their weakness. That might soon change, though, as Google recently teased a true video editor for Chrome OS during the annual I/O developer conference.

As mentioned at around the 18-minute mark in a "what's new in Chrome OS" video, Google says it is planning to bring LumaFusion to Chromebooks. This video editor is already quite popular on iOS, yet Google says it has worked closely with the developer of the app to create a "powerful multi-track video editing experience on Android optimized for large screens" on Chrome OS.

Read more