All the new Chromebook features quietly announced at Google I/O

At the annual Google I/O developer conference, Google announced several new features coming to Chrome OS later this year. The majority are designed to bring Android phones and Chromebooks closer together with cross-device synergies like communication and app streaming.

As discussed in a 23-minute-long breakout session video, one of the top talked-about features coming to Chrome OS soon is Camera Roll. With this one, you can open and share recent photos from your Android phone on your Chromebook. It will be coming “later this year” and will live in the Chrome OS Phone Hub. From there, you can simply drag and drop the listed photos as needed.

Google

The other big Chrome OS feature Google discussed is communication and app streaming. Coming “later this year,” this is a new way to access messaging and other communication apps from an Android 13 phone on all Chromebooks without reinstalling the app on a Chromebook.

Recommended Videos

When describing the feature, Google said that if you’re writing an email on your Chromebook, you’ll be able to respond to messages by opening your phone chat app on your device. Your Chromebook will mirror that app, in an open window from Phone Hub, and show you the content exactly as you have it on your phone.

Capping out the list of major features is one known as Fast Pair. As the name suggests, it is designed so your Chromebook can seamlessly discover and connect to compatible headsets, headphones, and earbuds with one tap. Google believes this feature can help you avoid losing audio and avoid going through additional setup when moving between different audio devices.

Google

As for app developers, Google is working on a new app discovery service. This has three goals: Elevated app discovery, consistent app experiences, and stable app fidelity. For you, this means finding apps more easily through curated collections, including Linux, Android, and traditional web apps. The app discovery service will be powered by machine learning and will be tailored to factors like user preferences, type of device, form factors, and computing power, according to Chrome Unboxed.

Google’s developer video also dives into some interesting Chromebook stats, with Google claiming that Chromebooks are the number one device in K-12 education. Other stats revealed that there were 20% more monthly active Chromebook enterprise users than in 2021. There are also more than 75 new Chromebook models planned for release in 2022, per Google’s data.

Editors' Recommendations

Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
Chrome is still a RAM killer, but this new feature would be a huge help

Google’s Chrome browser is infamous for consuming a lot of RAM. While recent updates have attempted to solve this problem from a technical side, a new feature may put more of the management in the hands of the user.
With the latest beta version of Chrome Canary, users can now simply hover their mouse cursor over a tab to gain access to real-time memory usage of that specific tab.
Up until now, you had to dig into the Chrome Task Manager to see how much memory each tab is consuming. But as reported by Windows Central, the new feature would give you quick and direct access to this important information. The prototype feature was first posted on X (formerly Twitter) by user Leopeva64 and showed the tab RAM usage.

Of course, it only gives a small overview and doesn’t offer the same detailed information (such as running processes, tabs, and extensions0 as the built-in task manager.
Practically speaking, having a small indicator on the top is going to make the process of clearing unwanted tabs a lot easier. The new feature is also said to inform users about whether Chrome's Memory saver feature has actively frozen a tab to save memory similar to Microsoft Edge's Sleeping tabs feature. Of course, this feature only works when a certain tab is inactive for a long period of time. 
Google is said to be testing this feature, but if you are using version 117 on the Stable Channel, you may get access to it. To enable the memory usage feature, head to Chrome://flags and search for Show memory usage in hovercards. Select the dropdown and enable it. A quick restart may also be required.
Recently, we saw Google testing on a feature that helps organize tabs in a more efficient way. Using the Organize Tabs features, the browser attempts to reorder your tabs into groups of similar pages. It even lets you rename these groups, and create tab groups automatically once it has categorized your tabs.

Read more
Google is changing everything you know about Chromebooks

Google is changing up Chromebooks in a big way. The new Chromebook Plus level of devices promises double of everything -- twice the performance, twice the storage, and twice the memory, all backed up by Google AI.

If you follow Chromebooks, this is the mysterious Chromebook X we learned about earlier this year. It's a set of specifications to take Chromebooks into the next generation, and they're based around bringing some of the weaker Chromebook closer to the level of the best laptops.

Read more
This Google Chrome feature may save you from malware

There are probably hundreds of thousands of Google Chrome extensions out there, and with so many options to choose from, it can be hard to know whether the plugin you want to install is hiding malware nasties.

That could become a thing of the past, though, as Google is testing a feature that will warn you if an extension you installed has been removed from its Chrome Web Store.

Read more