Chrome Is Testing a Built-In Text-Saving Feature
Google is going beyond traditional copy-paste with its “Save to Memory” functionality, which aims to make it easier to save important text in Chrome.
“Save to Memory” is currently being tested in Chrome Canary, per Windows Report, whose team first spotted the feature. It lets users capture selected web snippets and save them in one centralized space, rather than rushing to their notes app or a random document. When a user selects text on any webpage and right-clicks, a new “Save to Memory” option appears. Chrome saves the selection instantly and adds it to a new Memory Banks interface, which the user can access through the internal URL chrome://context-hub.
After saving passages, users can copy or download them individually. Choosing the copy option puts the items into the clipboard, all in a structured format. The text retains its metadata. Choosing the download option saves everything as a text file named “memory_bank_entries.”
If you try to save a file with the same name in Chrome and that name is already taken, it will add a number to the filename to make it unique. The downloaded file preserves data like excerpts, page titles, URLs, and timestamps. It shows the newest items first to help find recent captures.
As with all Canary experiments, Google may not bring this update to stable Chrome—but if it does, it could bring to life a version of the “multi-copy-paste” function many of us have dreamed of for years.