Infinite Session Restore – As the description reads on its page, Infinite Session Restore reduces the number of tabs being loaded simultaneously during session restore, to improve the responsiveness of the foreground tab.Page Almost Idle – Makes session restore use a definition of loading that waits for CPU and network quiescence.
So, to Improve Session Restore responsiveness in Google Chrome, just enable above two preferences. Here’s how!
Improve Session Restore responsiveness in Chrome
The two experimental flags have been rolled out for all the Desktop versions of Chrome including, Chrome OS and other popular platforms like Windows, Mac, and Linux. 1] Launch the Chrome browser and open a new window. 2] Enter the following text in the URL field and hit Enter: Chrome://flags/#infinite-session-restore.
3] The action when confirmed will instantly display the firsts flag in the browser. See the screenshot below. 4] See, if its value has been set to ‘Default’. If yes, use the drop-down arrow to display other values. 5] Choose ‘Enabled’. If prompted to restart the browser, ignore the message and proceed further. 6] Now, load chrome://flags/#page-almost-idle in the Chrome address bar.
7] Similar to the above procedure, use the drop-down menu on the right to set its value to Enabled. When done, restart the Google Chrome browser. Hereafter, you should notice a change in Chrome’s startup performance. Also, the browser will load all tabs that were opened earlier in the last session, but it won’t do that in an instant. The Infinite session restores, and page almost idle experimental features make tab restoring faster even if you have a lot of RAM, but system stability falls after a while. This is because even if idled, the tabs aren’t actually being unloaded from memory. As such it is essential to bear this point in mind while proceeding further.