• Google is speeding up the reopening of closed tabs in Chrome

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Aug 13 12:15:04 2021
    Google is speeding up the reopening of closed tabs in Chrome

    Date:
    Fri, 13 Aug 2021 10:59:11 +0000

    Description:
    Accelerate page load times if you kill a tab too quickly.

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    Its something we've all done when trying to have a tidy up after a marathon tab session In Chrome. Overzealous closing of tabs (or particularly enthusiastic pressing of the Ctrl + W keyboard shortcut) means that it is all too easy to accidentally close a tab by accident.

    Thankfully, it is very easy to reopen a tab that has been closed in error Chrome actually gives you various ways to do this but a new feature in the browser is going to help to speed up the process.

    With a handy tab restoration keyboard shortcut already available ( Ctrl + Shift + T ), Google couldn't do much to make it quicker to indicate a desire to restore a tab, so the company has developed a technique for speeding up
    the restoration. Google reverses embarrassing website-breaking Chrome update An incredible new search option to Chrome is added by Google Google Chrome is getting a major speed boost... due to Microsoft

    You may well have noticed that if you use the keyboard shortcut or, indeed, the tab context menu, or the History tool reopen a tab, there is a bit of a delay before the page in question loads and is navigable. This is something Google has worked to accelerate by implementing a new cache.

    Unsurprisingly called the Closed Tab Cache, is an extension of the Back-Forward Cache feature that speeds up navigating back and forth between pages by storing them in memory when you navigate away. By storing a tab in memory after it is closed rather than simply wiping it out, Google has been able to speed up tab restoration. A bundle of cache

    The feature has been available in the Android version of Chrome for a little while not that many people would necessarily have been aware of it and now Google is bringing it to the desktop edition of its browser.

    In order to take advantage of this (currently experimental) feature, you need to be running the Canary build of Chrome 94 which is available to download here . But even with this preview build installed, you still need to manually enable Closed Tab Cache using the following steps: Launch Chrome and visit chrome://flags/#closed-tab-cache Use the drop-down menu to select Enabled Restart Chrome and enjoy faster reopening of closed tabs Analysis: an important speed boost

    Speeding up restored tabs that have been closed by accident makes so much sense, with the only question surrounding the feature is simply why it took Google so long to implement it. It's all the more surprising when you
    consider that it uses very much the same technology as an existing feature as well as the fact that it had already been added to the mobile version of the browser.

    But with the arrival of the feature, these questions pale into
    insignificance; what matters is that tab restoration is getting faster. Of course, this may not be a speed boost that is mind-blowing or one that will have an astonishing impact on productivity, but that makes it no less useful.

    Anything that can be done to eliminate pauses and delays in workflow and concentration no matter how small is to be embraced, and it's hard to imagine that something very similar won't appear in more and more browsers in the very near future. Check out our guide to the best browsers

    Via Techdows



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/google-is-speeding-up-the-reopening-of-closed-t abs-in-chrome/


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