Almost 50% of internet users prefer Google Chrome as their web browser. Since its release in 2008, the browser has made surfing easy for its users. Whether it is turning notifications on and off from a website or permanently adding your address for online forms, Chrome keeps it simple. Using Google Chrome means staying connected with all of Google’s other apps. One account runs on all: Google Photos, Google Docs, Google Drive, and the rest. Other cool features like setting the most used apps on the home page, adding useful extensions, and having your most-used website open automatically make the experience better. One of these features is that of restoring tabs. Yes, you can restore tabs on Google Chrome.
Computers often shut down abruptly due to low battery and other reasons. Google Chrome makes sure that your work is not lost by letting you restore tabs. Besides having them saved in History, it lets you directly restore only those tabs that were lost all at once.