There’s been a fair bit of buzz lately around Lacros – the new version of the Chrome browser that should start the possibly-year-long process of rolling out to users starting with the next ChromeOS 116 update. And as the article below points out, if you want to get out of Lacros, you’ll need to go to os://flags to find to turn things back to normal. Afterwards, you will get Lacros and Lacros only, and the Canary logo that was here in ChromeOS 115 is replaced with the standard Chrome logo now. Either way, if you want to give this a go now, you’ll need to find the #lacros-only and #lacros-availability-ignore flags in the chrome://flags menu and enable those. For others, it made it through the update. The comments below show a few different scenarios playing out if you had Lacros enabled prior to this latest update. Thanks to one of our readers (thanks Eli Fennell!), we were quickly made aware this morning that the flags I point out to use in this post are no longer a valid way to try out the new Lacros browser on your Chromebook. UPDATE – : What a difference a couple days makes! With ChromeOS 116 rolling out to most device models today, things have changed a bit.
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