January Product Update

Gabriel Beghelini & Juan Farah on February 3rd 2026


Hi everyone,

This January Product Update is focused entirely on Equo Chromium. The theme across the latest releases is simple: better control in Standalone mode, smoother developer workflows, fewer integration frictions when embedding Chromium into Java desktop applications, and continued stability and security improvements.


What’s new in versions 128 & 138

v138
  • Standalone UX upgrades: Full window control (size/bounds/position + maximize/minimize) plus F12 → DevTools.
  • Better Eclipse/SWT integration: option to prevent Chromium from consuming SWT shortcuts.
  • Operational controls for enterprise setups: Runtime proxy updates + improved auth flow (with an option to suppress auth dialogs).

  • v128
  • Standalone parity improvements: window control features on the 128 line (size/bounds/position + maximize/minimize).
  • Enterprise-friendly networking: runtime proxy reconfiguration + improved auth handling (and optional suppression of auth dialogs).
  • Windows DPI/scaling fixes: continued improvements (including Eclipse 4.38 on Windows).

  • Fixes & improvements on versions 128 & 138

  • Proxy/auth reliability: improved Java Authenticator handling + cleaner proxy state (PAC cleared when proxy settings are removed).
  • Scaling consistency: better DPI/device-scale behavior (notably when switching monitors on Windows) + several scaling fixes.
  • Linux desktop improvements: GTK4 support and Wayland rendering fixes, including corrected browser layout and parent-window embedding behavior.
  • Security & packaging maintenance: ongoing updates and signing fixes.

  • Want the full details?

    If you’d like the complete list of changes (including all patch notes and version requirements), you can review the release notes here:

  • Equo Chromium v138 release notes
  • Equo Chromium v128 release notes

  • Final thoughts: what this means for your product

    These patch updates are primarily about making Equo Chromium easier to adopt and maintain in real Java desktop applications. They improve the day-to-day experience of shipping embedded web UI on desktop: smoother workflows when developing and debugging, fewer integration frictions when Chromium is embedded alongside existing UI behavior, and continued cross-platform refinements so applications behave more consistently across common desktop environments. In short, the focus is practical: reduce overhead for teams integrating Chromium, and make ongoing updates simpler and more predictable over time.


    For any questions or assistance, feel free to reach out at contact@equo.dev.

    Thank you for choosing Equo!

    Equo

    © 2026 Equo Tech, Inc.