Andy Walker / Android Authority
The Arc Browser was all anger a year ago, and he created me a lot of curiosity. After the initial test run, I gave it a few months before changing it completely. If you ask me today if I am sorry for the decision, the answer is an amazing number. In fact, since I went from Windows to Mac many years ago, I have been one of the most fresh tech switches.
At a time when every browser began to look like another – with most walking chromium – the arc felt like a fresh air breath. Although it was the visual upgrade that pulled me, the various smart features have bowed me for more than a year. And at this point, I don’t even want to consider going to Google Chrome – or any other web browser in this matter.
Will you ever consider switching from Chrome to an arc (or another browser)?
233 votes
Yes
48 %
Not
23 %
I have already pulled the Google Valley
29 %
Tab gods have easily blessed arc
Andy Walker / Android Authority
I hate recognizing it, but I have always struggled to manage browser tabs. I know that many users are in the same boat, but this assurance has never helped, because my situation was shamefully out of control. I had tabs open for months, which had no indication of why I needed them, was mixed in logs like temporary tabs that were still piled up. I accepted my fate – even I was completely transformed into an arc.
In fact, Arc Google Chrome and Microsoft Age used to be a major change. But it may be that the widespread jump was exactly what I needed to turn my habits into a good for. And I’m glad to inform him that he did so.
The most fruitful change for me was the default sequence of the arc that automatically closes all unsaturated tabs after a day (you can customize it. I have appointed myself in a week). He turned the script: Instead of preserving the tabs as a default and being too pile, they now disappear until I deliberately save them. It has just reduced the disorder on my most used desktop app. It’s easy to win me.
Krandeep Singh / Android Authority
The Arc meets this approach with something called Little Arc, a mini window that pops up to open the website that you just need temporarily and they don’t want to stop your tab bar (login pages and so on). This is now a huge part of my workflow, though it is far from over. As soon as I think about it, I wonder how I ever worked without it and why no more browsers have copied this idea yet.
Arc vs chrome: each other seems dim
Andy Walker / Android Authority
Certainly, most mainstream browsers, including Chrome, are now on the AI hype train, usually add chat boots to the sidebar like some patchwork. This gives you a step to visit the AI tool website, but not more. On the other hand, the arc has long been offering real useful and smart features, and they are much better integrated.
For example, whether you can rotate the inline links to get an immediate summary of this page before you decide. In addition, the CMD/CTRL + F shortcut is doubled as a search bar with AI, which allows you to ask questions about your natural language page.
However, if there are no tabs, if not digital laundry that has returned again, are you second in the last pile?
The two things I use more are related to both tab management – which, if you haven’t already guessed, this is a great deal for me. However, if there are no tabs, if not digital laundry that has returned again, are you second in the last pile?
To start, the arc automatically renames the tab titles and is downloaded by the names of the context, rather than the usual dirt of the file names. And when I am working on a big story that is open to research with dozens of tabs that has no clear order or structure, I use the feature of clean tabs. One click of the sidebar, and the arc cleans the same tabs with appropriate titles, without lifting a finger. With its price,, even Google Chrome has begun grip here, adding a similar feature with Gemini here.
Oh, and the arc also includes mini apps with built-in integration for popular services like Gmail and Google Calendar-two things I use all the time. If I have a meeting, a few minutes before the sidebar appears an Join button, lets me straight without digging my emails or calendar entries. Likewise, I can see recent emails in a small popup window without the need to open a full tab. As the fruit company likes to say – it just works!
I wish it all rose with arc
Andy Walker / Android Authority
As much as I love the arc and intend to stay with it for the near future, it’s not without flaws.
The biggest problem for me is, so far, battery life. Arc My MacBook Air battery eats faster with its choice. Chrome is just as bad, if not worse, while Microsoft Edge has been significantly more efficient with battery-even though running on chromium.
The arc maker is now focusing on a new browser, with no new features in the arc, which makes the arc future look dark.
Then it was the biggest threat that could potentially expose the entire browser in front of bad actors. The Arch is grateful that before it became a widespread problem, but he left many people, questioning his reliability. In addition, add recent news that the company is now focusing on a new browser, which has no new features in the arc, and the future of the arc looks dark.
This last bit is the most sting. But I like the Enough enough to continue using it until it is really unreliable for daily work. Until then, Chrome can cry on Gemini’s shoulder.


