The majority of iPhone users use Safari, Apple's browser, and not because they like it more than Google's, or another, but because it is already installed on the devices, and, therefore, it is the most convenient to use, and with greater compatibility with them.

However, this could change with the new google adwhich explains to us that, if you have an iPhone, and you want to transfer from Safari to Chrome, you will have it super easy, and there will be no excuse not to use your browser on Apple devices as well.

Transfer data from Safari to Chrome on iOS

If you've been using iPhone for a long time, chances are you'll stick with Safari simply because it comes installed and because changing browsers is quite lazy. Not because Safari is bad, but because thinking about losing bookmarks, passwords or history It already takes away your desire. Well, that's exactly where the novelty of Chrome comes in (especially if you use a Windows PC or you don't have Safari on other devices).

Google is preparing an option so that, from the iPhone itself, you can take your data from Safari to Chrome without having to use a computer or do strange things. Until now, if you wanted to do this, the process was quite clunky and unclear. Now the idea is that it is something much more direct, and anyone can do it without being lazy.

It's not like touching a button and that's it, because Apple protects Safari data quite a bit, but the process will be much more bearable. Basically you export the information from Safari and then Chrome gives you the option to import it. It guides you step by step, shows you what to copy, and lets you decide if you want to do it or not. Nothing about doing it blindly or with impossible steps.


Google Chrome on a MacBook

This is very good for people who use Chrome on other deviceslike your work laptop or computer, and you want to have everything synchronized on your iPhone as well. Until now, that jump was too lazy and that's why many stayed where they were.

The feature is still in testingso not everyone has it available. It will first reach those using trial versions of Chrome, and once they see that everything is working well, it will be activated for everyone else. It doesn't seem like something that will take too long, especially if they see that it works correctly and that people have no problems.

It is not a huge novelty nor something that is going to change how you use your mobile from one day to the next. But it is one of those small improvements that make changing apps no longer a pain. Especially if you've been accumulating bookmarks and passwords for years and don't feel like starting from scratch.

In short, Chrome wants to make things easy for you so that, if you want to try it on the iPhone, you don't feel like you're losing everything you already had. And for that reason alone, it is already a quite logical improvement, despite the fact that many will continue to trust Safari, and they will not care. However, you never know when you will leave Apple's system, and it may help you.

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