The difference with Unity is that the space at the top is actually free and 
tabs could be put there.
The GNOME top panel always houses the same OS level functionality no matter 
what application is active. The Unity panel is dynamic and fills itself with 
whatever menu functions the active application exposes. Chromium does not have 
a menu bar by default. So the panel is filled with a placeholder menu that 
isn't actually needed.

It's not technically possible today, the browsers needed to be patched
and some indicator-tabbar function would have to be written but it is
possible from an interface design point of view.

Second difference: GNOME top panel is an option, it can be removed
without loosing functionality (see the layout in mint or opensuse).
Unity forces one to use a top panel.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/749335

Title:
  unity breaks fullscreen tab on top (Fitts's law)

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