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Flows & Spaces

  • Completely removes the concept of tabs.

  • Flow feature creates persistent project spaces.

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When The Browser Company said they wanted to build “an OS for the web,” we thought it was marketing hype. With Arc 2.0 , they proved us wrong.

I have been using the beta for two weeks, and going back to Chrome feels like using Internet Explorer 6. Here is why Arc 2.0 is the biggest shift in web browsing since tabs were invented.

1. The Death of the Tab Bar

In Arc 2.0, you don’t “open tabs.” You enter Flows . A Flow is a persistent workspace. If you are researching a trip to Tokyo, you have a “Tokyo Flow.” Maps, hotel booking sites, and messy Google Sheets all live there, arranged spatially on a canvas, not hidden in a list.

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Spatial Web

It feels like a mix of a browser and a whiteboard (like Miro). You can visually organize your browsing session, and it stays exactly how you left it.

2. “Browse for Me” is now an Agent

The original “Browse for Me” was a glorified search summarizer. The new version is an Action Model .

  • “Book a table for two at a quiet Italian place in Shibuya for Friday night.”
  • Arc 2.0 searches, finds availability on Tabelog, fills in your details, and presents the “Confirm” button.

You didn’t verify 10 different sites. You didn’t deal with pop-ups. The browser did the browsing.

3. Chrome vs Arc 2.0

    • Focus : The UI disappears. It’s just you and the content.
    • Speed : AI pre-fetching makes the web feel instant.
    • Organization : Spatial Flows solve “tab overload” permanently.
    • Learning Curve : It breaks 20 years of muscle memory.
    • Extension Compatibility : Some legacy Chrome extensions struggle with the new spatial UI.
    • Memory : It is heavier than ever (16GB RAM recommended).

Conclusion: The Web, Reimagined

Arc 2.0 is risky. It demands that you unlearn how to surf the web. But once you do, you realize that the “tab bar” was a prison we didn’t know we were in.

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Must Try

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