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This is great, although I wish the new mobile app they’ve alluded to was a higher priority (but I realize that’s being greedy).

Arc isn’t for everybody but if it “clicks” which requires getting over a somewhat steep learning curve it is great.

It’s also fair to question why it requires an account, but anything syncing across devices would (unless you handle that manually with version control or something else).

Arc is exactly what Chrome might be if it wasn’t beholden to an advertising-first company. The innovation within the Chrome app itself has languished & browser extension development and policy are prohibiting more & more significant user experience changes (not just blockers). Arc not only diverges from Chrome with a ton of nice user experience changes, it also adds new types of functionality like ad hoc browser extensions called Boosts that can be shared (very similar to UserScripts). So many posts that say this browser-based on Chromium is problematic because it constrains diversity in the browser market, but I wish more people would just try it out. It is a step in the direction. Maybe someday they will swap out all of what remains from Chromium, but to what end? Maybe the best thing about Chrome (and Chromium) is that it enables smaller companies to jump-start new concepts in browsing.




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