As the cost of cellular data plans has decreased significantly in recent years, Google has revealed its plans to discontinue its Lite Mode feature in Google Chrome on Android.
As the cost of cellular data plans has decreased significantly in recent years, Google has revealed its plans to discontinue its Lite Mode feature in Google Chrome on Android.
First released back in 2014 under the name “Data Saver”, the feature was later rebranded as “Lite Mode” in 2019 and was designed to help those with slow or limited data connections.
When enabled on an Android smartphone, Lite Mode would send some of a user’s web traffic through Google’s own servers before it was downloaded on their device. If pages loaded slowly, the search giant’s servers would simplify them so that less data would be downloaded to a user’s device.
While Lite Mode helped those with less mobile data avoid being hit with heavy data overage charges, the feature didn’t work with private browsing enabled and it also prevented users from accessing pages on a local network such as an internal company site.
Sunsetting Chrome Lite Mode
In a new support document, Google has revealed its plans to sunset Chrome Lite Mode with the release of Google Chrome 100 in March of this year.
The feature will be turned off for those still using it on March 29 as the search giant has observed a decrease in the cost for mobile data in a number of countries in recent years. At the same time, Google has also made improvements to Chrome to “further minimize data usage and improve web page loading”.
Although Lite Mode is being discontinued, the company remains committed to ensuring Chrome can deliver a fast webpage loading experience on mobile going forward.
If you still want to limit the amount of data your Android smartphone uses, you can try restricting background data for individual apps in settings, limit how often apps sync and what they update, use some of your apps offline and try using Pocket or a similar service to download and save web pages to read later when connected to Wi-Fi.
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Source: Techradar