Why Arm + Linux now? In a blog post, Google only says that it โaddresses the growing demand for a browsing experience that combines the benefits of the open-source Chromium project with the Google ecosystem of apps and features.โ What weโre left wondering is whether Googleโs talking about existing demand, or demand yet to come.
Thereโs certainly a growing demand for Linux. Some Verge editors have begun to ditch Windows with varying degrees of success. But those are our x86 desktops โ there isnโt a lot of consumer-facing Linux on Arm chips, unless you count all the Linux-based Android phones out there. You can buy Linux on laptops from Dell, Lenovo, Framework, and such, but again, they use x86 chips. (And if youโre not a consumer, thereโs already Chromium.)
But three of the companies that actually build Arm processors โ Qualcomm, Nvidia, and Mediatek โ may look to Linux as they try to compete with the Windows/Intel/AMD incumbents. Qualcomm told me in January that it sees โa lot of interest on other operating systemsโ beyond Windows for its PC-grade Arm chips. Nvidia could reveal its N1 and N1X processors for Arm laptops as soon as next week at its GTC 2026 developer conference.
While those Nvidia laptops might get announced with Windows, it wouldnโt be surprising if they targeted Linux too, once the basics like Chrome are sorted out. Googleโs blog post specifically namedrops Nvidiaโs DGX Spark as a target for Chrome โ those $4,000+ beefy micro AI desktops, sold by a wide array of the companyโs partners, also run Linux on Arm. Google says itโs putting Chrome into Nvidiaโs package manager to make installation easier; everyone else will have to go to chrome.com/download when the browser arrives in Q2.