
But as well as being a crucial accessibility feature for people across the world, it’s also likely to prove useful if you’re working in a busy café or working at home and are unable to find a pair of headphones but are unable to hear what is happening on-screen.
When it leaves beta, the feature will be available in Google Chrome on Windows 10, macOS, and Linux. Of course, the feature will also be accessible in Google’s Chrome OS, which powers its popular ChromeBook affordable laptops.
The news comes as a new update to the Windows 10 update issued from Microsoft broke an important security feature in Google Chrome – and all web browser based on the Chrominium open-source codebase, which powers the likes of the Opera browser, and Microsoft’s own recently revamped Microsoft Edge.
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