Archub Review
At its simplest, ArcHub is the aggregated view of everything you have open across every Space (work, personal, research) and every Profile (Google accounts, Slack instances, Figma logins). But calling it a "tab manager" is like calling the Starship Enterprise a "taxi."
Yet, for all of Arc’s genius—its vertical tabs, split views, and easels—there was a nagging friction point. How do you manage the context of hundreds of tabs, spaces, and profiles without losing your mind?
And then it gives you the tools to clean it up. Select ten tabs from yesterday’s "Today" section? Close them all at once. Need to consolidate a project? Drag five tabs from three different Spaces into a new "Folder" inside a single Space. Let’s be honest: Most tab managers are ugly. They are spreadsheets of URLs. ArcHub, however, retains Arc’s signature aesthetic. Tabs are large, preview-friendly, and colored by Space. The animations are fluid—dragging a tab from one column to another feels tactile, like moving a physical card on a desk. ArcHub
ArcHub becomes the triage nurse for the firehose of the internet. Psychologists have a term for the anxiety of forgetting where you left an important resource: cognitive offloading failure . You trust the browser to hold your place, but then you can't find it.
In a world of AI copilots and voice assistants, ArcHub is a quiet reminder that sometimes the most intelligent software is the software that simply shows you where everything is . At its simplest, ArcHub is the aggregated view
With ArcHub, you open the dashboard. You see everything . You drag the Personal tab directly into the Work Space’s pinned section. ArcHub handles the context shift instantly, moving the tab (and its associated login profile) seamlessly.
In the chaotic world of web browsers, innovation has historically meant one of two things: speed or extension count. For nearly two decades, browsers competed on who could launch fastest or who had the biggest library of add-ons. Then came The Browser Company’s Arc , a tool that didn’t just tweak the UI but surgically re-imagined the browser as an operating system for the web. And then it gives you the tools to clean it up
It turns the browser from a collection of isolated rooms into a single, panoramic loft. ArcHub works in perfect symbiosis with another Arc feature: Little Arc (the temporary, floating window that appears when you click a link from outside the browser).