The new save icon on the top of the menu will now let Chrome users save the entire page along with the text and the images. The audio and the video items on the web page will come with a save icon that will let you start the download in the background. The Downloads screen will now give access to the saved content, which also includes the media files. The content is aggregated on the basis of its type; for instance, web pages are stored in the Pages section, while Video, Audio, Images, and Documents get a section of their own. Also, users can share the downloaded items without actually exiting the browser. Google has promised a frugal browser with Chrome 55, and that is true to a certain extent; low-memory devices are expected to witness a spike in performance due to better memory management. Furthermore, the JavaScript Heap Size and the Zone Memory Reduction are also expected to reduce memory usage by less than 35 percent, and the difference is expected to be pronounced in machines with <1GB RAM. Chrome 55 also comes baked with a better contextual search UI, and it also highlights the misspelled words in the text fields. The Chrome 55 update is already rolled out for Mac, Windows, and Linux users. Updates for Android users are being rolled out incrementally. As always, if you want to get the latest update, you can download an installable apk from here.

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