Google has acquired Cameyo, an organization growing virtualization instruments to run Home windows apps on ChromeOS units, for an undisclosed quantity.
In a weblog submit, Cameyo CEO Andrew Miller and Google product lead Naveen Viswanatha wrote that the purchase will profit ChromeOS, Google’s light-weight Linux-based working system, by giving ChromeOS customers larger entry to Home windows apps “with out the trouble of complicated installations or updates.”
“By combining the facility of ChromeOS with Cameyo’s revolutionary digital utility supply expertise, we’re empowering companies to modernize their IT infrastructure whereas preserving their investments in present software program,” Miller and Viswanatha wrote.
Cameyo CTO Eyal Dotan based the startup in 2018, aiming to create a platform to virtualize Home windows apps in order that they might run on non-Home windows machines and even inside net browsers. Cameyo’s strategy works by packaging an app, inclusive of its dependencies, in an standalone, self-contained executable that additionally has a virtualization engine to run on a spread of working programs.
Final 12 months, maybe foreshadowing the acquisition, Google partnered with Cameyo to launch options together with Home windows app native file system integration and the power to ship digital Home windows apps as progressive net apps, or apps hosted in datacenters that run in browsers.
As The Verge’s Tom Warren notes in his piece on Cameyo on Wednesday, Google’s been on a mission to push ChromeOS in enterprise and schooling after a relatively lukewarm response from customers. With Cameyo’s tech, organizations seeking to transfer away from Home windows — or work with each Home windows and ChromeOS — have a doubtlessly extra interesting avenue, significantly as increasingly more apps transfer to the cloud and web-based applied sciences.
Certainly, Cameyo claims on its web site that lots of of organizations, together with college districts and monetary establishments, already depend on its software program.