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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Richard Priday

Chrome on iOS is getting new Google Maps, Translate, Calendar and Lens features

An image of the Google Chrome logo on a smartphone, representing an article about how to set Chrome flags

Chrome for iOS is set to absorb features from several other Google apps in an upcoming update, as announced in a new Keyword blog post. So anyone who uses Google Maps, Translate, Calendar or Lens (and that's a whole bunch of us) may soon find they won't need to swap apps as often.

Chrome isn't getting full versions of these apps, so don't worry about losing dedicated access to your events or favorite locations soon. Google is simply adding shortcuts to commonly-used features in some of its apps outside of Chrome.

For instance, if you press and hold an address after the update, Chrome will recognize it and let you open it up in a mini Google Maps window, with the option to transfer to the full app if you want more information or directions.

(Image credit: Google)

Similarly, pressing and holding on a date and time lets you quickly create events, either in Google Calendar or Apple Calendar. Google's demo shows the whole event being filled out, including the name, duration and location, thanks to Chrome reading info from the page

(Image credit: Google)

You can already translate web pages in Chrome with Google Translate, but now you can ask the app to translate only a selected portion of text. Sounds handy when there's a surprise block of text in another language in the middle of an otherwise all-English web page, or if you're trying to read a page in another language to practice your own translation skills, but can't work out what a specific word or phrase means.

(Image credit: Google)

Google Lens Google's photo-based search service, is also getting part of it folded into Chrome. You could already use this on images you found on web pages, but now there's a shortcut to the camera function from the search bar for even more convenient use.

(Image credit: Google)

But when are these updates launching?

All of this seems genuinely very useful to Chrome users on iOS. It's also a canny move from Google to use one of its most popular services to promote other parts of its software ecosystem. We saw it do this before with Gmail, which now has Google Meet and Chat built-in alongside your emails.

The key detail that Google doesn't tell us is when all this is coming, but since Chrome on iOS follows a regular weekly update cycle, hopefully it’ll only be a couple of weeks before we see this update go live. And if you need help getting your head around Chrome’s glut of new features, we’ll be sure to have how-tos ready to help you shortly after the update’s live.

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