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How to disable Chrome's Tab Image Previews

Google has been working on new tab preview functionality in the company's Chrome web browser for quite some time. Chrome displays the page title and URL in a card currently when you hover the mouse cursor over a tab in a browser windows. Coming soon, Chrome may also display a thumbnail preview of a webpage when you hover the mouse over a tab.

Some users of the browser may find the visual identifier useful, especially if multiple pages of a single site are open that share the same page title, as it may help identify the right page to activate. Others may find the previews distracting and may be searching for ways to disable the functionality.

google chrome tab preview

Google seems to have started the rollout of thumbnail previews when users hover over tabs in Chrome in the latest Canary releases. The feature was enabled in version 91.0.4460.0 on a test system, but it may have been enabled on other systems earlier than that. Since it is rolled out, it is possible that it is not enabled yet on some machines.

Chrome Canary does not include a switch in the settings to disable the feature; it is possible that a switch will be added to a future version, so that Stable users of Chrome may turn it off if they don't need the preview feature.

chrome://flags/ tab hover card images

For now, things are managed via an experimental flag:

  1. Load chrome://flags/#tab-hover-card-images in the browser's address bar.
  2. Set the status of the flag to Disabled.
  3. Restart Google Chrome.

Chrome reverts to the classic tab preview feature after the restart, so that only the page title and the URL are displayed when the mouse is hovered over a tab in the browser.

To restore the functionality, set the status of the flag to Enabled. Users who don't have the preview feature enabled yet in their browser may set it to Enabled to turn it on right away.

Note: experimental flags may come and go. Some are integrated natively in the browser and then removed, others may be removed without integration. It seems unlikely that Google is going to remove the feature without integrating it natively in the browser, but it is a possibility. (via gHacks)

Now You: Do you prefer thumbnail previews or text previews, or none at all? 

 

 

This article was first seen on ComTek's "TekBits" Technology News

 

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