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If one preferred to use the "normal" Google Chrome, or was otherwise restricted from using the Business/Education edition of Google Chrome in an Active Directory environment, and wanted to use a GPO to configure this setting, one could use Group Policy Preference Shortcut item (likely targeted at the the computer), which could create the shortcut on the "All Users Desktop," with the appropriate arguments. So to frame this as an answer to the original question (how to do this via Group Policy): You need to modify the Chrome shortcut that you use to launch Chrome from. There is a way to do this for a single-computer (non-enterprise) Chrome install. Here is a picture from one of my sources, which I modified from:Can you link to your source, to provide proper attribution to the party who originally created the material? Here is an alternative for those in my situation who may have stumbled across this post as well." Or, perhaps I should have read your statement as " I have a situation that is different from the original poster's question (in that we have already rolled out Google Chrome, or have not done so in a controlled manner), and because my situation is different - the accepted solution doesn't work.

I"m curious to know why "most of us" do not want to the business edition of Chrome - especially if in an environment that is a part of a highly regulated industry. it does not exist for us.I don't understand why "most of us" do not want to be able to centrally manage Chrome via Group Policy? You can ungroup a tab from a tab group by right-clicking "Remove from Group." And you can delete entire tab groups by right-clicking on the name of the tab group (or the first color icon) and selecting "Ungroup.This is not the solution most of us want. You can minimize entire tab groups by clicking on the color circle at the beginning of the tab group. Once you've created one or more tab groups, you can move entire tab groups within your web browser just by drag-and-dropping. Right-click on one of those tabs, select "Add Tab to Group" in the drop-down menu, and then type the group name and select the color you want the group organized by. It essentially lets you organize your tabs like a color-coded filing system.

Called Tab Groups, the feature allows you to group tabs together and organize them by color, custom group name or even an emoji.

Google introduced a tab grouping feature to Chrome within the past year that is a life saver if you're somebody who always has a zillion tabs open at a time. This is another pro tip rather than a setting to change, but it's incredibly useful.
