Google’s Chromium team is building a way to launch apps without installation by just clicking a link


Google really wants Chrome apps to take off. Not only has the company added rich notifications, in-app payments, and an app launcher into its browser, but now it’s developing ephemeral apps that launch by just clicking a link.


There are two separate components here. Ephemeral apps (you can enable this under the chrome://flags/#enable-ephemeral-apps flag) let you try a Chrome app before installing it. Linkable ephemeral apps (under the chrome://flags/#enable-linkable-ephemeral-apps flag) meanwhile allow you to launch said apps from hyperlinks.


Both features were first spotted by developer and Google open-source Chromium evangelist François Beaufort. The former was committed a month ago and the second was added yesterday.


Google first changed the app launcher user interface to consider ephemeral apps. The company added a Launch button to the Chrome Web Store results in the app launcher, intended for launching apps without installation in Chrome. If an app does not have any permission warnings, the launch prompt will be skipped and just fire up immediately.


Here’s how this looks (notice the Add and Launch buttons replace the current Install button):


hbjXSWB 730x485 Googles Chromium team is building a way to launch apps without installation by just clicking a link


As for the launching ephemeral apps from hyperlinks, Google separated the two features into two separate flags to ensure that only links appearing on a Google search results page will launch the app. This should give the company more control over stopping malware from just launching:


LlEud1m 730x385 Googles Chromium team is building a way to launch apps without installation by just clicking a link


This could have a significant impact on Chrome app adoption. If users can just “click to try” rather than deciding if they want to install an app, Google will be effectively removing yet another hurdle for its Chrome Web Store platform.


Chromium is the open source Web browser project that shares much of the same code as Google Chrome, and new features are often added there first. There’s clearly still a lot of work to be done before we see this feature show up in Chrome, but given that the company is already making changes to the Chrome Web Store, it’s clear this is another one of those “when” instead of “if” questions.







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