If you’re looking to play music from your Chrome browser through separate devices, there are a few different ways to do it. The simplest way is to use the built-in audio player. Just open up Chrome and click on the three lines in the top right corner of the window. From here, you can select “Audio” and then “Play audio from…”. If you want to use a different player for your music, you can download one from the Google Play Store or Apple App Store. For example, if you want to use Spotify, you can download it from the Google Play Store and open it up after installing it on your device. If you want to play music through Chromecast, there are a few different ways to do that as well. You can either use the built-in Chromecast app or use one of the many third-party apps that support Chromecast streaming. ..


A word of caution: installing Chrome extensions is more dangerous than you’d think, so we generally advise against adding too many of them. However, this one seems okay and is open source to boot. If you’re still cautious, you can manually set it to only work on certain sites, like YouTube, in Chrome’s extension settings.

RELATED: Browser Extensions Are a Privacy Nightmare: Stop Using So Many of Them

Installing AudioPick

Click “Add to Chrome” on AudioPick’s download page, and accept the permissions. You’ll have a new icon in the menubar, which brings up the interface:

By default, it’s set to use your system’s main audio output, or more specifically whatever you’ve set Chrome to use in Windows’ per-app sound settings. You can change the current tab to use any other output you have set up in Windows.

AudioPick remembers your selection for each tab. Your selection also won’t affect other tabs. Current tabs keep using whatever you set them to, and new tabs will use the System Default Device.

This works with any device, even virtual ones, which makes this extension useful if you’d like to play music through your speakers while listening to something on your headphones, like game audio.

One bug we’ve found: occasionally, when hotplugging audio devices, the extension can get stuck and mute output. If this happens, just set it back to the System Default Device, and then re-enable your preferred device.

RELATED: How to Record Your PC’s Audio With a Virtual Audio Device

Limit the Extension’s Permissions

As a general rule for all Chrome extensions, you should whitelist specific sites on which this extension can work. That ensures the extension is only running where you need it and provides some protection in case the extension goes bad and starts tracking you.

You can do this in Chrome’s extension settings. Click the menu icon in the top right corner, and select More Tools > Extensions. Scroll down to AudioPick and select “Details.”

You can change the site access permission, and add as many sites as you’d like:

Alternatively, you can set it to “On Click,” which will disable permissions until you click the icon in the menubar.

RELATED: How to Control a Chrome Extension’s Permissions