Khaberni - The Chrome team at Google has developed a new experimental browser named Disco (Disco).
The unique feature of the Disco browser lies in its ability to receive a query or request and automatically open several related tabs, and it can also create custom applications for specific tasks.
For example, if you ask for travel tips, it will create a trip planner app, and if you needed help studying, it will create a flashcard system, as announced by the company on Thursday.
Disco operates with a feature called "GenTabs," which are information-rich pages created by the Gemini artificial intelligence models.
The recently launched Gemini 3 model can instantly create interactive interfaces, instead of just offering texts or images. With Disco, this capability becomes the core function of the web browser.
Parisa Tabriz, head of the Chrome team at "Google," said that Disco is not a replacement for Chrome, but it is an experiment aimed at understanding how users interact when moving from just using tabs to creating a personal app that fits their needs.
Disco was designed to encourage users to explore websites, unlike most artificial intelligence browsers.
The Chrome team noted that many users continue chatting without fully exploring tabs and resources.
To change this behavior, the team decided to highlight regular tabs more, hoping to encourage users to add more information and search within their own "GenTab." Initial data has already shown positive results for this approach.
The future of "GenTabs" remains unclear. Will they be permanent web applications with shareable links, or will they be temporary, disappearing once closed? Tabriz says she does not know yet.
However, she believes that both options—the permanent and the temporary—can be supported, along with providing ways to extract vital information from "GenTabs" to other tools such as "Google Workspace" apps.




