Chrome is integrating Memories into History Page

Back in May, we reported Google is working on an alternative for the Chrome History, called Memories. The feature can still be seen by visiting chrome://memories. After building the feature, the Chromium team is now adding it -aka “History Clusters” into  chrome://history under Journeys. The company is planning to remove the Memories page altogether later.

Chrome history journeys

Chrome Memories

Initially, Chrome fetched and displayed information from Chrome History, tab groups, and bookmarks.

And, the chrome://memories page also lets you search for visited pages and allows the removal of individual items.

Recently, Google labeled Memories as History Clusters.

Here is how the feature page looks like now.

updated Chrome memories

Journeys in Chrome://History

Google is now moving History Clusters to Journeys in chrome://history and wants to remove the memories internal page altogether after that.

“This change embeds <history-clusters> is now embedded in  Chrome://history and makes it accessible via /Journeys.”

In order to minimize the scope of the change and to make sure that the experience is first ironed out, chrome://memories is still kept around and TS transpiled resources in c/b/r memories are copied over. ”

A follow-up CL will remove chrome://memories and move its resources to c/b/r history/history_clusters.”

To see Journeys aka Chrome://memories with new info on chrome://history

  1. Open Latest Chrome Canary
  2. Visit chrome://flags
  3. Find and set chrome://memories to Enabled Limit 1000, on-device and restart the browser
  4. Head to chrome://history and select Journeys.

More on Chrome:

Chrome 94: Chrome Settings page is updated to improve navigation

Here are new Chrome Actions you can run in Chrome 92

Chrome lets you search on Google Lens for selected Page regions

Chrome to let you revise its Privacy Settings

Venkat Eswarlu

Venkat is an independent technology journalist and the founder of Techdows. He has been covering web browsers, Windows, and software news since 2009. His exclusive scoops on Chrome, Firefox, and Edge features have been cited by Forbes, TechCrunch, Wired, CNET, and other major publications.

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