How to restore recently closed tabs and windows in SafariChrome for Android adopts this excellent tab feature — How it worksThe best cheap laptop deals of April 2021
Spotted on Chromium Gerrit and now available on the Chrome Canary build for developers on Windows, users will be able to restore browser tabs through a new tab search pop-up menu. The menu will show a list of recently closed tabs, which users can look through and easily restore. What’s more, the new feature lets users search for specific tabs that have been closed and open them up again — even if it was closed a while ago. This new method appears to work similarly to restoring a tab via Google Chrome’s History page. However, instead of giving a list of every web page visited, the tab search menu lets you reopen the specific tab you had open. That definitely narrows down the search.
How to restore closed tabs on Google Chrome
Currently, if you have accidentally closed a browser you’re working on or it crashes, Google will offer to restore the page. However, this option won’t always show up. To restore closed tabs, you can right-click a blank space along the top of a browser window and navigate to “Reopen closed tab.” This will lead you to Chrome’s History page. There’s an even faster way for those accustomed to keyboard shortcuts. On a Windows laptop, press CTRL + Shift + T or press Command + Shift + T on a MacBook to resurrect the most recently closed tab. This keyboard shortcut will reopen tabs in reverse chronological order, so those who closed a tab a while ago will have to keep pressing until it pops up. The new tab search feature will come in handy, and is expected to roll out in a Chrome update soon. (H/T Android Police)