Skip to main content

Chrome updates will have a ‘dramatic impact’ on MacOS performance

A series of updates to improve Chrome’s impact on battery life and performance for MacOS will soon roll out, the browser’s director of engineering, Max Christoff, told the Wall Street Journal. Christoff said the company will address Chrome’s longstanding reputation as a battery and memory hog with “three big improvements” that are due in the next few months.

“I view performance on Chrome as a journey, not a destination. This is an ongoing investment in improvements to speed, performance, and battery life,” he added.

In the coming months, Chrome will begin actively cracking down on resource-intensive ads across the web that clog your Mac’s power in the background. Google has been working toward this shift for a while, and in a blog post back in May, also confirmed Chrome will restrict such resources ads can take up. Ads that demand or violate this limit will be automatically blocked and replaced by a block of space that simply reads “Ad removed.”

Another key change Christoff identified will address how Chrome handles the active tabs and windows you haven’t visited in a while. In a future update, Chrome will be better both at understanding which tabs need to be throttled and cutting back on how much energy these dormant windows can drain in the background. Christoff claimed it will have “a dramatic impact on battery and performance.”

Lastly, Google is also working on a mysterious new optimization that “allows the most performance-critical parts of the software to run even faster.”

Christoff didn’t comment on when these updates will arrive, or whether they’ll be available for Windows computers too. But considering recent tests spotted inside the developer previews of Google Chrome, they are likely not too far away. Earlier this month, an experimental feature enabled Google Chrome to shut down unnecessary scripts web pages today come laden with.

Even though Google Chrome still dominates nearly three-quarters of the browser market share, the competition has steadily stepped up and can now go toe to toe in terms of performance. With the added benefit of privacy and efficiency, alternatives such as Mozilla Firefox or Apple’s Safari rival Chrome and even edge it out. Will these improvements give Chrome the kick it needs to compete?

Shubham Agarwal
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
Google’s Incognito Mode is in trouble
Google Chrome incognito mode screenshot

Google could soon be on the hook for deleting the private data of millions of users if the proposed settlement of a class action lawsuit is approved, according to The Verge.

The settlement proposal is part of the Brown v. Google lawsuit, for which the tech giant has agreed to “destroy or de-identify” the web browsing data it has saved from people utilizing the “Incognito Mode” feature on the Google Chrome browser. Google would be responsible for deleting billions of records and making sure undeletable records are not associated with individual users.

Read more
Google may build Gemini AI directly into Chrome
The Google Gemini AI logo.

Google is now fleshing out its newly unified Gemini AI system in its browser with its first attempt at implementing Chat with Gemini into the Chrome Omnibox.

This latest effort will update Google Chrome with a Chat with Gemini shortcut in the Chrome Omnibox, allowing users to access the AI chatbot feature without having to go to the Gemini website, according to WindowsReport. The Omnibox serves as an address bar and search bar, and it adds multiple other tasks to a browser. Now with a simple @ prompt, you can also access Google's AI chatbot to answer questions, create images, and generate summaries, among other tasks.

Read more