Do you find yourself struggling to stay organized within your web browser? Too many tabs? Too many accounts? Too much everything that you wind up feeling overwhelmed?
Or maybe you simply need to put a wall up between your work and personal browsing. Whatever is driving your need for better organization, the Arc browser can help. Arc makes it easy to create separate profiles and keep things organized.
Also: Why I love Arc browser’s Shared Folders – and how they work
What do profiles do?
Essentially, a profile isolates logins, cookies, browsing history, archive timing, favorites, extensions, and even settings (within arc://settings). You can have a profile for Work, Personal, School, Children — anything you need.
Arc has a slightly different take on profiles from other browsers. Instead of creating a separate browser profile, you create a profile for your Arc Spaces. This way, not only can you switch quickly between profiles, but you also can include the spaces you’ve already created for each new profile. By doing this, you don’t have to then re-create every space you’ve already added. But don’t worry, when the new profile uses a pre-existing space , it doesn’t inherit anything from the profile that created the space . It’s as if you’ve cloned the spaces for the new profile, without the associated data or information.
Let me show you how to create a new Profile in Arc.
How to create a new Arc Profile
What you’ll need: To create a new Arc profile, the only thing you’ll need Arc installed on either MacOS or Windows. (Come on, Browser Company, port this browser to Linux!) That’s it. Let’s create your first profile.
The first thing to do is open the Arc browser. Once opened, right-click (or two-finger tap) an empty spot in the left sidebar and select Set Profile > New Profile.