Chrome’s AI Mode is turning the browser into a kind of sidekick that sits next to whatever you are doing on the web, instead of living in a separate tab you constantly jump back to. For anyone who lives with 25 open tabs and a half-finished search chain, this update is basically Google admitting: “Yeah, tab chaos is real – let’s fix it with AI.”
At the center of the change is a new side-by-side view. When you’re in AI Mode on Chrome desktop and click a result, the page no longer steals the whole window; it opens next to the AI panel, in a split-screen layout. You can scroll the site on the left and keep your conversation with AI Mode on the right, ask follow-up questions, and refine your query without losing your place. Google says early testers found this especially useful for long articles and videos, because you can keep the content in view while asking the AI to explain sections, pull out key points, or suggest what to read or watch next.
That might sound like a small UX tweak, but it changes the rhythm of how you search. Instead of a loop of “Search → open → back → tweak query → open again,” you’re in a continuous workspace where browsing and asking questions happen at the same time. Picture researching your next laptop: you open a product page on one side, then ask AI Mode, “How does this compare to the M3 MacBook Air for battery life and weight?” The assistant can use the page you’re on plus other sources to answer, without you manually copying links or bouncing between tabs.
Google is also going after the classic “too many tabs, no idea what’s where” problem. A new plus button in Chrome’s search box and inside AI Mode lets you pull your existing browsing directly into a query. On desktop or mobile, you can tap that plus icon, pick from recent tabs, and tell AI Mode to use them as context. It’s not limited to links either – you can mix tabs, images, and files like PDFs in the same prompt.
In practice, that looks like this: you’re planning a trip, with tabs open for flights, hotels, a couple of Reddit threads, and a city guide. Instead of juggling all of them manually, you add those tabs to AI Mode and ask, “Which hotel is best value if I care more about walkability than amenities?” The model uses the pages you selected, combines them with broader web knowledge, and surfaces a more tailored answer. The same idea applies to studying – you can select your lecture slides, online textbook chapter, and a research article, then ask for more examples or an explanation in simpler language, and the response is grounded in the exact material you’re working from.
What Google is really doing here is collapsing the boundary between “search” and “the stuff you already have open.” Traditionally, search engines know nothing about your messy browser state unless you paste URLs into them. With these AI Mode upgrades, Chrome becomes the bridge: it knows which tabs and files you choose to share, and the AI uses them as first-class input alongside your prompt. It’s still opt-in and scoped to what you add via the plus menu, but the direction is clear – your current task, your open information, and global web results are all meant to flow into a single, contextual answer box.
Google is also threading in its newer AI tools. Wherever you see that plus menu in AI Mode, you can jump into things like Canvas – Google’s environment for generating documents, quizzes, web pages, or even simple apps from a prompt – as well as image creation tools. That means you can go from “research” to “output” without leaving Chrome. For example, after reading up on a topic side-by-side, you could tell Canvas to draft a study sheet, a landing page summary, or a simple interactive widget based on what you’ve just explored.
All of this sits on top of Google’s Gemini-powered stack and Chrome-specific AI features that have been rolling out over the last few weeks. In parallel, Chrome is getting “Skills,” which let you save your favorite prompts as one-click tools inside Gemini in Chrome – say, “summarize this page in 5 bullet points” or “compare the specs of products on these tabs.” Those Skills can be triggered via the plus icon or a slash command and are synced across devices, so your personal shortcuts follow you wherever you sign into Chrome. Combined with AI Mode’s side-by-side view and tab-aware context, the browser is slowly morphing into a kind of personalized AI command center rather than a passive window to websites.
For now, Google says these AI Mode upgrades – side-by-side browsing, searching across tabs, and tighter integration of tools like Canvas and image creation – are live for users in the United States, with expansion to other regions promised over time. They’re limited to Chrome, which is both a product decision and a strategy: if AI Mode becomes the most convenient way to research, shop, and study, your browser choice starts to matter again. For heavy web users in the US, this update is worth turning on and living with for a week – not just to see how much less tab hopping you do, but to get a glimpse of how search itself is being rebuilt around context rather than isolated queries.
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