The big Google project that has been whispered about in tech circles for years, one that will eliminate the boundaries between the desktop and mobile worlds, is finally becoming official. The brand-new operating system, Aluminium OS, which will combine the strengths of Android, which dominates the smartphone market, and ChromeOS, which has become a stronghold in education and the corporate world, is preparing to reshuffle the cards in the tech world.
Official Confirmation for Aluminium OS
The Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2026 was the stage for the first official signals of this historic merger. An interview conducted by the Android Authority team with Sameer Samat, Head of the Google Android Ecosystem, put an end to months of speculation. When asked directly, “Will the Aluminium OS operating system be released in 2026?”, Samat replied, “Yes, I’m very excited about the end of this year.” This statement proves that Google’s massive ecosystem project, which has been in development behind closed doors for a long time, is now ready to be unveiled and that the first major demonstration will take place before the end of the year.
Roadmap Leaked from Antitrust Case: Full Release in 2028
However, this revolutionary step by the tech giant will not reach end users overnight. Internal company documents that emerged during the company’s ongoing search-focused antitrust (monopoly) lawsuits revealed the roadmap for Aluminium OS in full detail. According to the documents, following a grand unveiling in the fourth quarter of 2026, the operating system will initially be available only to select hardware partners and test experts.
Google plans to keep this “closed beta” process quite long and meticulous. The operating system is not expected to be free of bugs and stable enough for end users until 2028 at the earliest.
So What Will Happen to ChromeOS Users?
This radical change immediately raises questions about the fate of millions of Chromebook users and educational institutions that rely heavily on these devices. Leaks suggest that Google will manage this massive transition in a very smooth and gradual manner. The current ChromeOS ecosystem will not be abruptly discontinued. According to plans, ChromeOS will continue to receive official support, security updates, and patches until at least 2034. This gives both corporate companies and schools nearly 10 years—a very long transition period—to adapt to the new operating system.
Why Was Such a Merger Necessary?
So why is Google merging two established systems? Apple’s seamless integration between its mobile devices and Mac computers, which binds users to its ecosystem, is Google’s biggest motivation in this regard. The company wants to combine Android’s incredible flexibility and application library in the mobile world with desktop-class productivity in a single pot. When Aluminium OS is fully operational, application developers will be able to address both phones and computers with a single code base, instead of expending separate efforts for two different platforms.
In short, Google isn’t just offering a new operating system; it’s redesigning the hardware-software integration of the next decade. The first demonstration at the end of the year will undoubtedly dominate the tech agenda for a long time.
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