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Google Chrome almost got a screenshot editor but we’re not that lucky
Google already scrapped this project but we’re still hoping
2 min. read
Published onMarch 12, 2024
published onMarch 12, 2024
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Google Lens is a great tool for mobiles because it allows you to search the web for relevant results based on the pictures you take with your phone. However, you can also do a similar thing on your desktop browser. Simply right-click on an image from a Chrome tab and select Search image with Google.
The window will split and you will see a lot of similar images on the right pane.
Recently, as spotted byLeopeva64 on X, Google was trying to go further and provide you with the Lens Overlay feature. We don’t know exactly what it was supposed to do, because it doesn’t work, but the supposition was that it was a screenshot editor within Chrome.
It didn’t take for Google more than one day to scrap this idea, and we found that out from the same Leopeva64 user.
Chromium developers have decided that Chrome’s screenshot editor isn’t polished enough to ship it, they *might redesign it in the future, but for now they will remove the flag and the code related to this feature:https://t.co/vHG46t1jZUhttps://t.co/NVQOsa5JvF.pic.twitter.com/k5pTa4wwhb
Apparently, the developers dropped this feature because it was too hard to implement without important changes to Chrome, as they highlighted in theproject page:
We decided, after a great deal of UX feedback, that this component isn’t polished enough to ship and we don’t quite see a path to getting it there without a big rework. This change deletes the feature, the logic to install the component, and the wiring for it in the screenshot bubble.
Now, you can still use the Search image with Google feature and then edit whatever image you’re interested in onanother image editor.
Who knows, some day, Google may come back to this idea and have their own built-in screenshot editor.
What do you think about Lens Overlay and Google’s screenshot editor? Tell us all about it in the comments section below.
More about the topics:Google Chrome
Claudiu Andone
Windows Toubleshooting Expert
Oldtimer in the tech and science press, Claudiu is focused on whatever comes new from Microsoft.
His abrupt interest in computers started when he saw the first Home Computer as a kid. However, his passion for Windows and everything related became obvious when he became a sys admin in a computer science high school.
With 14 years of experience in writing about everything there is to know about science and technology, Claudiu also likes rock music, chilling in the garden, and Star Wars. May the force be with you, always!
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Claudiu Andone
Windows Toubleshooting Expert
Oldtimer in the tech and science press, with 14 years of experience in writing on everything there is to know about science, technology, and Microsoft