The other new feature only benefits laptop users and is called Energy Saver. Once enabled, it limits background activity and visual effects on webpages so that your laptop can conserve battery and you can put off plugging in your charger. The feature specifically kicks on when your laptop hits 20% battery life. So if you have plenty of juice left, Google won’t limit your browser performance. And of course, you can still turn the feature off if you’re feeling lucky. 

Other recent Chrome updates 

Google is constantly updating Chrome. Just this week they added address bar shortcuts to the browser that make searching your tabs, bookmarks and history so much easier. Just entering the @ symbol in your address bar allows you to now select bookmarks, history or tabs. Select one of those and you are now searching within those specific categories rather than on Google Search. But that’s not the only recent update the web browser has gotten. Back in November, Google added a new side panel to the browser to improve search functionality. They also added a price tracking feature and the ability to pin tabs so your most important tabs are always there when you need them.  If you’re a Chrome super-user, you may want to consider a Chromebook instead of a  Windows or Mac laptop. While these aren’t legendary gaming machines, they are great ultra-portable productivity devices. There are currently tons of great deals on Chromebooks, including $115 off the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 with an i3 processor (opens in new tab). The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 is currently our best Chromebook and this deal gets you one with good specs at a discounted price. 

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