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Google Chrome is testing a big change to tabs


Google’s flagship web browser is getting a new feature that people already love in other browsers — vertical tabs.

The new tab feature is available now as part of the Chrome Canary experimental build for developers, per Windows Report. In the developer beta, when you right-click on the tab bar that normally sits horizontally underneath the URL entry field in Chrome, you’ll now see an option that reads, “Show tabs on side.” This allows you to arrange your tabs vertically. If you do, the tabs will appear in a sidebar on the left side of the browser.

As with any developer beta, the feature will likely get some tweaks before it’s released to users. And there’s no way of telling when that might happen.

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Vertical tabs are a feature that has been available in other browsers, such as Vivaldi, Firefox, and Microsoft Edge, for several years now. Chrome users have been living behind the times.

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It sounds like the vertical tab interface gives you most of the features you’d want out of it. You can search tabs, arrange them into groups, create new ones, and switch back and forth between vertical and horizontal tabs at will. You can also collapse the sidebar to clean up your screen. While this is just a cosmetic change to a feature that Chrome has had since its inception, it’s sure to be welcome news among avid tab collectors nonetheless.

That said, there’s another option for managing tabs, if you’re brave enough.

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