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Your Chromebook should now have one of Windows’ best features

DATE POSTED:September 5, 2024

Chromebooks and Google’s ChromeOS that runs them are getting a long-overdue PC-like feature: Snap groups, which allow you to “snap” app windows to various sides of your screen.

The new feature is part of ChromeOS M128, the stable version of the operating system. It should automatically roll out to all Chromebooks soon, including yours, if it hasn’t already.

Related: The best Chromebooks for your money

In ChromeOS, Snap groups allow you to “snap” ChromeOS apps to various parts of your screen — but you can also save the configurations, much like the virtual workspaces that Microsoft includes in Windows.

For me, Snap groups aren’t enough to overcome the productivity advantages of connecting a Chromebook or PC to multiple displays. But I’m using the equivalent of a ChromeOS Snap group right now on my Windows laptop: one app pinned to the left-hand side of the screen, plus reference documents in a separate window on the right. It eliminates the need to constantly shift back and forth between app windows.

ChromeOS Snap Groups ChromeOS Snap Groups

Google

ChromeOS Snap Groups

Google

Google

ChromeOS M128 is also gaining a second feature that’s useful, if a bit awkward: optical character recognition (OCR) within the ChromeOS Camera app. As the name suggests, you can now use the camera to snap a photo of a sign or document and let OCR “read” and extract the text.

Of course, few Chromebooks have rear cameras, so you’ll have to either rotate the camera or fold a convertible down into the equivalent of a tablet to really take full advantage of this feature.

This feature in ChromeOS M128 supports 77 languages, and it supports both horizontal and vertical detection, Google said. It’s also disabled by default, but can be enabled via Settings > Text detection.

OCR in ChromeOS OCR in ChromeOS

Google

OCR in ChromeOS

Google

Google

Google also added some tweaks, such as simplifying the permission controls on mics and cameras and storing the “vitals” (crash rate and other performance metrics) for a one-year period.

Further reading: Handy ChromeOS upgrades you might’ve missed