Google Chrome will soon load pages faster on Windows, Linux, and macOS

Google Chrome will soon load pages faster on Windows, Linux, and macOS
Google is working on an update to its Chrome web browser that will improve client speeds for Windows, Linux, and macOS. As reported by Windows Latest, Google plans to introduce "caching" support on desktop platforms with Google Chrome 92. This feature, which has been available for a long time on Android, enables instant page load. buttons. According to the post, Google has been testing the feature for almost two years. “Back to Forward Cache is a browser feature that improves the user experience by keeping a page alive after the user has navigated away from it and reusing it for session history navigation (Previous / Next button browser , history.back() etc..) to make browsing instantaneous. Cache pages are frozen and not running JavaScript,” Google explained.

Gradual introduction

Although a specific release date has not yet been determined, it is believed that Google Chrome 92 should arrive in the next few months. Instead of using the "Test of Origin" method to test the new service, Google will introduce it gradually. This means that some users will probably benefit from the feature before others. However, those who can't wait can manually enable it via Chrome's flags menu. “We have already delivered this functionality for Android. We want to start experimenting with the back cover in desktop environments,” Google said. Similar features have been supported in Firefox and Safari for many years, across desktop and mobile platforms, the company explained in its detailed breakdown. Through Windows Latest