

Even cooler, if you've left pages open on your laptop at home, you can access those same open tabs from your mobile Chrome browser. If you're already a desktop Chrome user, your bookmarks will be synced across all your browser versions after signing into your Google account.

We’re hoping for Google Translate support, but given how the mobile releases continue to diverge, we’re not holding our breath.There are clear perks in using Chrome instead of other Android browsers. It’s not exactly clear which of these features will land on Chrome for iOS, but we do expect version 28 to hit Apple’s App Store in the next few days. As of Chrome 27 beta, it was turned on by default and let you see your data savings by going to “Bandwidth Management” in Settings and enabling “Reduce Data Usage.” In Chrome 28 beta, the feature included a spiffy graph for your estimated bandwidth savings: Google first introduced the feature in Chrome 26 beta. What isn’t noted in the changelog is that Google plans to turn on its experimental data compression service for Chrome 28 “over the coming days.” It helps you save bandwidth, load pages faster, and browse more securely on your phone and tablet by optimizing the pages you visit. Plenty of stability and performance fixes.New user interface for right-to-left (RTL) languages – An optimized interface for RTL languages including Arabic, Farsi, and Hebrew.Fullscreen on tablets – Similar to phones, simply scroll down the page and the toolbar will disappear.

Google Translate – When reading web pages in other languages, Chrome will automatically detect and offer to translate them to your language.The full Chrome 28 for Android changelog is as follows: The feature was first introduced in Chrome 27 for Android phones, which have now also gained a “+” in the toolbar for creating tabs. Next up is fullscreen support on tablets: as you scroll, the top toolbar disappears so you can see more web page content. Now you can use it while you’re on the go as well. For those that use Chrome on the desktop, this is the same built-in translation bar you’re already used to for quickly skimming a Web page you otherwise wouldn’t be able to understand.
