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Biscuit is a Chromium-based browser developed by the Biscuit Project that re-organizes the traditional tabbed interface into a persistent sidebar of individually pinned “apps,” ensuring that frequently used web services remain instantly accessible rather than disappearing among dozens of open tabs. Designed for professionals who rely on SaaS tools such as Notion, Trello, Gmail, Figma, or internal dashboards, the program lets each site run in its own isolated container that can be muted, hibernated, or assigned a custom icon and color, effectively turning the browser into a lightweight workspace launcher. Version 1.2.33, the twelfth public release since the project began, adds global bookmark import, workspace-wide dark-mode scheduling, and hardware-acceleration tweaks that cut idle CPU usage by roughly 15 % compared with earlier builds. Users typically deploy Biscuit as a dedicated client for productivity suites, keeping communication channels in one column and project boards in another while a separate Chromium window handles casual browsing, although nothing prevents mixing the two. The browser supports Chrome extensions, Google Safe Browsing, and automatic silent updates, yet stores no user data on external servers beyond standard Chromium sync tokens. Because each pinned app is sandboxed, sign-in states remain segregated by default, allowing simultaneous access to multiple accounts on the same platform without container extensions. Released under the Biscuit Project brand, the application is categorized as a Web Browser on software directories and is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always supplying the latest version and enabling batch installation alongside other applications.
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