
Memories: Chrome's reimagined combined view for bookmarks, history, and open tabs for the desktop browser should be available with this release, though you'll probably have to activate the chrome://flags/#memories flag before you can start using it. Once enabled under chrome://flags/#chrome-labs on your desktop, you'll see currently active flags and experiments you're running behind a beaker icon next to your address bar. Chrome Labs should roll out with this release of Chrome. This is currently only available for single-page PWAs. The " Shared Element Transitions" rely on system-provided animations, so developers don't have to hack together solutions for transitions anymore. Better page transitions for web apps: Web apps can specify a simple set of page transitions to make apps feel more native. Web Bluetooth manufacturer data filter: The Web Bluetooth API can now filter the nearby devices list based on manufacturer data. Part of it is a new "dayPeriod" format for displaying dates in the form of "7 in the morning", "11 in the morning", "12 noon", "1 in the afternoon", "6 in the evening", or "10 at night."
New JavaScript version: Chrome 92 adds version 9.2 of the V8 JavaScript engine, which has a slew of updates in tow.