Skip to main content

This new Google Chrome feature may boost your search history

Google is adding a new feature to its Chrome web browser that’s intended to help you find previously browsed topics and pick up where you left off. Called Journeys, it’s rolling out now for Chrome’s desktop version.

The feature essentially works like an extension of browsing history. When you type a word into the search bar or head to the Chrome History Journeys page in your browser, you will see a list of previously visited sites linked to that topic. Chrome will know how much you’ve interacted with any particular site, and those it considers the most relevant to you will go to the top of the pile.

The Journeys feature in the Google Chrome web browser.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Google says you will see information “whether it was [from] earlier today or weeks ago.” The Journeys feature will also show related search terms, potentially helping you with your onward research.

Recommended Videos

Unlike your history, though, Journeys groups your searches by topic, even if they span different time periods. That could make it a bit easier than trawling back through your search history in an attempt to remember that elusive page you visited. Instead, you’ll see everything on that topic gathered together, whether you searched for it yesterday or three weeks ago.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

This being Google, you might have privacy concerns over how this information is logged and used by the company. Google’s announcement tries to head off those worries, explaining that “Journeys currently only groups history on your device — nothing is saved to your Google account.” As well as that, you’ll be able to delete “individual items or entire clusters of activity” from your Chrome settings or disable Journeys completely.

Right now, the Journeys feature is only available on Chrome desktop. However, Google says exploring whether to allow access from multiple devices in the same way that your passwords or bookmarks sync from one device to another.

As well as Journeys, Google has added a few more Actions to the Chrome address bar. You can now type things like “View your Chrome history,” “Customize Chrome,” or “Share this tab” to quickly perform tasks that would otherwise require rooting around in the browser’s settings.

And on Android, Google has added new Chrome widgets for your home screen. Aside from widgets letting you start a text, voice, or Lens search, there are also widgets for opening an Incognito tab in the browser and even playing Chrome’s dino game. These can all be added by long-pressing the Chrome icon and selecting Widgets.

Alex Blake
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
U.S. government to Google: sell Chrome
Google Chrome browser running on Android Automotive in a car.

Google might have to sell Chrome, despite its ranking as the best browser you can use. After ruling that Google has illegally monopolized the search market, the U.S. Department of Justice is pushing for Google to sell off Chrome to break up its search dominance. Chrome currently represents over 65% of the browser market, far ahead of any competitors.

According to Bloomberg's reporting, officials from the DOJ and several states who have joined the case will recommend to federal judge Amit Mehta that Google sell off Chrome in order to rebalance the scales. Google parent company Alphabet has been involved in the lawsuit since early 2020. In August, Mehta ruled that Google illegally obtained a search monopoly and called for sanctions against the tech giant.

Read more
ChatGPT monthly usage may now rival Google Chrome
A person sits in front of a laptop. On the laptop screen is the home page for OpenAI's ChatGPT artificial intelligence chatbot.

A number of popular generative AI platforms are seeing consistent growth as users are figuring out how they want to use the tools -- and ChatGPT is at the top of the list with the most visits, at 3.7 billion worldwide. So many people are visiting the AI chatbot, and its figures are rivaling browser market share. It can only be compared to Google Chrome figures in terms of monthly users, which is estimated to be around 3.45 billion.

Statistics from Similarweb indicate that ChatGPT saw a 17.2% month-over-month (MoM) growth and a 115.9% year-over-year (YoY) traffic growth. Some highlights that spurned the ChatGPT growth during 2024 include its parent company, OpenAI, updating its web address from a subdomain, chat.openai.com, to a main domain, chatgpt.com. The tool especially saw a surge of traffic in May 2024, when it hit a 2.2-billion-visit milestone, and has been growing ever since, according to Similarweb researcher David F. Carr.

Read more
This underrated Google Chrome feature turned me into a power user
google chrome automatic tab groups featured

I don't like when my web browser pesters me. It's one of the many reasons I use Google Chrome over Microsoft Edge, but for once, I'm actually thankful to catch a stray pop-up in Chrome.

You may have seen a similar pop-up in Chrome, assuming you consider it the best browser, like I still do. When your tab count gets unmanageable, Chrome will offer to group your tabs together. I dismissed this notification probably a dozen times, but I decided to finally give it a shot one day. And it completely changed how I use Chrome.
The time saver

Read more