
"I've been a fan of vertical tabs for a long time. Vertical tabs make it easier to manage a growing number of tabs, keeping them better organized and visible. Most of my favorite browsers (except for Opera -- are you listening?) have vertical tabs. Once you start using them, you'll wonder how you got along without them. At the moment, the vertical tabs feature is only available to the Canary release of Chrome, which isn't suitable for everyday work."
"Why are vertical tabs such an important feature? The best reason is that they make it so much easier to see what tab is what. If you're like me, and you keep a metric ton of tabs open per window, it can be challenging to discern which tab is which. Vertical tabs do away with this confusion to make it easy to find the tab I'm looking for."
Chrome is adding vertical tabs to its Canary release, enabling users to preview the feature before broad rollout. Vertical tabs improve tab management, making it easier to identify and organize many open tabs while reclaiming screen real estate and producing a cleaner interface. Canary is unstable and unsuitable as a default browser due to potential data loss and frustration. General availability of vertical tabs is expected within a couple of months. Some browsers already offer vertical tabs or workspace features, and there is a desire for a Workspaces-like system to further enhance tab organization.
Read at ZDNET
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