
"Several months ago, reports surfaced that Google would soon roll out a long-requested feature for its Chrome browser -- vertical tabs. The time has arrived, and you can officially try out vertical tabs on Chrome. The relocation of tabs from the traditional top spot to a sidebar might seem like a small change, but the feature is a fan-favorite among browser enthusiasts and something other browsers like Edge, Vivaldi, Firefox, and Brave have had for a while."
"One small caveat is that for now, the feature is only available in Chrome Canary, the experimental version of Chrome that changes daily. Canary is free to download, though, and functions almost identically to the regular version of Chrome. It was technically possible to have vertical tabs on Chrome already, but you had to go through third-party extensions that weren't always reliable."
Chrome now offers vertical tabs, relocating the tab bar from the top to a sidebar. The feature is available in Chrome Canary, the experimental daily-build version, and can be enabled by right-clicking the top tab strip and selecting "Show tabs to the side." Vertical tabs behave like traditional horizontal tabs while stacking vertically for easier visibility and management. The layout frees horizontal screen space, which is useful when working with spreadsheets or documents. Previously, vertical tabs required third-party extensions that were sometimes unreliable. The feature mirrors functionality already present in other browsers such as Edge, Vivaldi, Firefox, and Brave.
Read at ZDNET
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]