 Are you bored one? I'm Jessalyn. Let's dive into what's new in DevTools in Chrome 91. First, a new pop-up is available when you hover the mouse over the WebWiteToes marker in the performance panel. In the performance panel, start by profiling and reloading the page. Then, hover the mouse over the WebWiteToes marker to understand whether the performance is good, needs improvement, or poor. Next, you can inspect the CSS scroll snap alignment. When an HTML element on your page has scroll snap type applied to it, you can see a scroll snap badge next to it in the elements panel. Click the badge to toggle the scroll snap overlay. Here, you can see dot marks on the snap edges. The scroll pod has a solid outline while the snap items have dashed outlines. The scroll padding is filled in with green color while the scroll margin is filled in with orange. Use the new memory inspector to inspect an array buffer in JavaScript as well as the wasm memory. In the sources panel, set the breakpoint and refresh the page. Notice that we have a buffer variable here. In the scoop section, there is a new icon next to the buffer value. Click on it to reveal the memory inspector. You can navigate the memory with either your keyboard or the buttons. To learn more about inspecting JavaScript array buffer and wasm memory with this new memory inspector, check out the documentation. You can now selectively enable or disable badges to stay focused on the important badges while inspecting web pages. In the elements panel, right click on any element. Select batch settings from the context menu. The batch settings pane will now appear on the top. Toggle the checkboxes to show or hide the badges. Image previews in the elements panel will now display more information to help you better understand your images and apply optimization if needed. Hover the mouse over an image element. The popup now shows the image render size and aspect ratio, intrinsic size and aspect ratio, file size and current source. A new network conditions button is added to the network panel with options to configure content and coding. Click on the new button to open the network conditions tab. Notice the new accepted content and coding option. Configure it to test if server responses are encoded correctly. The issues tab now categorizes issues for better serverity indication. Open the issues tab by clicking on the issue count button on the console. Here you can see the issues are categorized into page errors, upcoming breaking changes and possible improvements. Now for a bonus tip. Use the monitor events to lock specific events of a specific object to the console. For example, I would like to monitor the windows resize and scroll events. Here is how the syntax will look. Now try to scroll or resize the window. The event object is locked in the console. Use a monitor events to assist the monitoring. All right, as usual, there are additional updates on the blog. Check out our recent posts on trust tokens, sources panel improvements and more. All links are provided in the video description. Thanks for watching. See you in six weeks for Chrome 92.