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A simple right click could change the way you use Chrome (GOOG)

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Most of what we do in Chrome involves using the left click button on the mouse, but have you ever tried right clicking on your tabs?

When you do, you get a few options that could help streamline your work flow, and it makes Chrome makes even more useful as a web browser. 

Here are some useful Chrome tips that have been right under our right-clicking finger but you may not have known exists.

If you have the same tabs open all the time, like a tab for your email, calendar, or whatever else that's useful to have on hand while you're working at your computer, you can pin the tab so it sticks on your browser, even after you close and reopen Chrome.

And just like that, your tab is pinned. It becomes smaller compared to unpinned tabs and sticks to the left of the tab row in Chrome. If you want to unpin the tab, right click it and select "Unpin Tab."

Apple announced at this year's WWDC that the new Safari in the new Mac OS X El Capitan will also feature pinned tabs.



If you want to quickly close all tabs apart from one, right click on the tab you want to keep, and select "Close Other Tabs." Every tab apart from those that are pinned will close.



If you want to keep two or more tabs but want to quickly delete the others, click and drag those you want to keep to the left of the tab row. Then right click the last tab you want to keep with the unwanted tabs to its right and click "Close Tabs to the Right." The tabs you want to keep on the left will remain while all the tabs on the right of the tab you right clicked will close.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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