![]() ![]() On the iPhone, tab navigation is superior to Safari's offering: Tabs display in a vertically stacked list that's quick to swipe through to find the screen you're after.Īnother compelling Chrome feature is its ability to sync your open tabs from other devices. It's the equivalent of a keyboard shortcut for doing so on the desktop. On the iPhone, that swipe navigates through one tab at a time on the iPad, it instantly cycles through all of your open tabs-I know of no faster way to flip through tabs on iOS. That last one you can accomplish simply by tapping the tab you're after (on the iPad), or with a swipe from the edge of the screen. ![]() You can quickly create new tabs, rearrange tabs, and flip among tabs. Chrome's tab implementation, on both the iPhone and iPad, is excellent. Let's start by highlighting the good features, and there are plenty of them. But owing to a few unfortunate limitations-many of them outside of Google's control-it's tough to recommend that anyone rely on Chrome as their main iOS Web browser. Google's Chrome browser for iOS is well made and a pleasure to use, particularly if you're deeply entrenched in Google's ecosystem. ![]()
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