There are probably 700-billion-trillion pages out there but ARC has picked 6. Why those 6? No idea. Have those 6 paid to be there? No idea. Should I just trust that those 6 are reputable sources? Yup.
I wanted to quote more sections but almost the whole post is worth quoting. I suggest you read the whole piece yourself.
Saturday, 27 May 2023
— With Arc Brower’s updated Boosts feature, you can customise any website by changing colours, fonts, or text size. By far the most useful feature is Zap, which removes content from a website by merely clicking on the element. It’s a great, intuitive tool to de-clutter enshittified websites like Twitter or Youtube.
Arc is full of new ideas about how web browsers can work: it combines bookmarks and tabs into one app switcher-like concept; it makes it easy to search among your open tabs; it has built-in tools for taking notes and making shareable mini websites.
Arc is very different from other browsers. The breadth of new functionality in Arc is overwhelming at first. I initially toyed around with Arc for an hour and then didn’t open it for a couple of weeks. But I came back, and it’s growing on me.
Most of our work happens in browsers today, meetings, emails, calendars, or writing. And Arc does an excellent job of grouping all those aspects into spaces, split panels, keeping important tabs open, closing others automatically. Overall it’s a more organised browsing experience.