My Experience with Chrome's Vertical Tabs
I recently got my hands on Chrome's vertical tabs, and I must say, it's a game-changer. Moving tabs from the top to the side of the browser makes it look cleaner and more organized.
Enabling Vertical Tabs in Chrome
To try out vertical tabs, you need to use the Beta or Canary version of Chrome. Once you have it, you'll need to enable the feature manually using a flag. After that, you can move your tabs to the side by right-clicking above the address bar and selecting the option.
What I Like and What Needs Work
I love how the vertical tab menu looks and feels. The Tab Search button is now at the top, and the buttons for tab groups and creating a new tab are at the bottom. However, there are some things that need improvement. For example, clicking a tab closes it when the vertical tab menu is minimized, and I wish the address bar were moved to the top of the vertical tab menu.
Should You Try Vertical Tabs?
If you're curious about vertical tabs, I say give them a shot. They're still in the early testing stage, so Google has time to make changes before they're widely released. Who knows, you might just love them like I do.