I've been using Spot's Chromium repo to keep up to date, but apparently nobody has been working on it as of late. The "stable" version is 13.0.782, which is marked as "old" on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Chrome#Release_history and the "unstable/trunk" is 14.0.827, which is just a few revisions shy of current stable Chrome release.
On 09/29/2011 03:32 PM, Konstantin Svist wrote:
I've been using Spot's Chromium repo to keep up to date, but apparently nobody has been working on it as of late. The "stable" version is 13.0.782, which is marked as "old" on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Chrome#Release_history and the "unstable/trunk" is 14.0.827, which is just a few revisions shy of current stable Chrome release.
Why not use Google's own repo?
On 09/29/2011 03:01 PM, Steven Stern wrote:
On 09/29/2011 03:32 PM, Konstantin Svist wrote:
I've been using Spot's Chromium repo to keep up to date, but apparently nobody has been working on it as of late. The "stable" version is 13.0.782, which is marked as "old" on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Chrome#Release_history and the "unstable/trunk" is 14.0.827, which is just a few revisions shy of current stable Chrome release.
Why not use Google's own repo?
Because that's Chrome, not Chromium.
On 09/30/2011 02:02 AM, Konstantin Svist wrote:
I've been using Spot's Chromium repo to keep up to date, but apparently nobody has been working on it as of late. The "stable" version is 13.0.782, which is marked as "old" on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Chrome#Release_history and the "unstable/trunk" is 14.0.827, which is just a few revisions shy of current stable Chrome release.
http://spot.livejournal.com/319745.html
Rahul