Arc On G+ Info
And it was beautiful.
Not on Google+ as in “built for it.” But on as in: they resurrected an old, read-only archive of public Google+ posts and rebuilt a browsing experience around it. Why resurrect the failed social network no one asked for?
One internal tester described it as: “Walking through a mall that closed five years ago, but the lights are still on and the fountains still run.” Arc’s modern, minimalist, keyboard-driven ethos clashed beautifully with Google+’s maximalist 2010s design language: badged profiles, +1 buttons, animated GIF profile headers, and the infamous “What’s hot” fire icon. arc on g+
Here’s a draft for a about Arc on Google+ — written in the style of a nostalgic tech deep-dive or retrospective feature. Title: Arc on G+: The Browser That Tried to Rewrite Social Browsing Subtitle: Before Arc’s desktop renaissance, there was a brief, strange moment when The Browser Company experimented inside Google’s abandoned social network. By [Author Name] Filed under: Digital Archaeology / Browsers I. The Ghost in the Grid Google+ launched in 2011 as Google’s answer to Facebook. By 2019, it was a digital graveyard — quiet Circles, abandoned Communities, the occasional eulogy post from a diehard photographer. But for a few months in late 2022, something unexpected happened inside the corpse of Google+.
A group of designers and engineers from The Browser Company, then still polishing the now-famous Arc browser for macOS, decided to run a semi-secret experiment. They called it . And it was beautiful
Today, Arc has moved toward AI tabs, shared Easels, and collaborative browsing. But every time you open a Space in Arc and see those circular avatars grouped together — that’s a ghost of Google+.
Because, according to an internal design memo leaked to TechCrunch (and later confirmed by Arc’s then-CPO), Google+ represented a forgotten model of “spatial sociality” — content organized by (asymmetric follow relationships) and Communities (topic-first grouping) rather than algorithmic feeds. One internal tester described it as: “Walking through
Arc on G+ didn’t modernize the content. Instead, it rendered every post in its original font (Google’s old “Open Sans”) but inside Arc’s split-view, command-bar-controlled interface. You could search posts by decade, Circle density, or even emoji frequency.