Google is bringing Android apps to Chromebooks

Users will be able to download apps from the Google Play Store this fall

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Google

Google's Play Store for Android will be coming this fall to Chrome OS, the lightweight operating system that powers Chromebook laptops, the company announced today.

That means Chromebook users will be able to download and install apps made for Android onto their Chromebooks, expanding the base of applications available for those devices. Previously, Chromebooks were able to run only Web applications built for Chrome.

It's an important enhancement for Chrome OS, which Google has been touting as the perfect operating system for schools and businesses, but which is lacking applications compared to Android, OS X, iOS, and Windows. By bringing Chrome OS and Android together, Google will expand the utility of both Android apps and Chromebooks.

Chromebooks lack app compatibility, admitted Rajen Sheth, the director of product management for Android and Chrome for Business and Education. The fall Chrome OS update will better equip businesses and schools with apps they want, without requiring the developers of those apps to build a separate Chrome app, Sheth said.

Chromebook shipments overtook Mac sales in the U.S. during the first quarter of this year, according to IDC, with most Chromebooks sold to educational institutions. Making Android apps available to those users should make the platform even more appealing to buyers.

With the planned update, Chrome OS users will be able to write term papers on their Chromebook while also checking Snapchat, said Kan Liu, Google's senior director of product management, at the company's I/O developer conference.

With the Chrome OS Files app, users will be able to keep files in sync across both Android and Chrome apps, too. Android apps will be able to run in three window sizes, and users will be able to receive Android notifications on Chrome.

Enterprise administrators will be able to push applications down to devices through a centralized process and can control which apps are available through the Play Store using the Play for Work API. Administrators concerned about the security of the system can also disable the store altogether.

It's all powered by a containerized Android framework that runs on top of the Chrome OS. Apps will be running on the latest version of Android, with the latest security patches, so users can ensure that their apps will stay secure, Liu said. 

What's more, the architecture of the system will allow Chromebooks to work with just about every Android app, as long as devices have the hardware to support the applications' needs. 

This is a feature Google has been working on for a while, but this is the first time the company has shown off more of the technical details of the app integration.

The move to create a cross-functional app platform across both a desktop operating system like Chrome OS and a mobile OS like Android isn't unique to Google. Microsoft is trying a similar approach with Windows 10, allowing developers to build Universal Windows apps that run on computers, tablets, and smartphones.

Like many of the other announcements Google made at its I/O developers conference this week, the Android apps integration feature won't be available for users until this fall. Developers who want to test their Android apps on Chrome will be able to use the Asus Chromebook Flip, Chromebook Pixel, and Acer Chromebook R11 starting in June.

Copyright © 2016 IDG Communications, Inc.