Marie kondo your desktop
Be a tidy Kiwi in your desktop and create better workflow
Be a tidy Kiwi in your desktop and create better workflow
Pinning browser tabs is a feature built in to the Google Chrome browser that makes it easier to manage having multiple pages open within the browser simultaneously. The feature narrows the tab and moves it to the left of the screen.
Why use pinned tabs? pinned tabs clean up your tab bar by organising you most frequently used tabs to appear as soon as you open up the google browser.
The first thing worth exploring is how to work with tabs using the right-click.
Try it now. Right-click on a tab and look at the options you have available. There are some powerful features on offer there:
These can be useful to help combat tab overload. The three I find the most useful are Duplicate, Pin Tab, and Mute Site. I've also started to learn to use Close Tabs to the Right, by moving less useful tabs to the right and then using this as a mass way to close them.
Many of us keep a lot of browser tabs open at once. It's even more common if you're researching something and you suddenly find yourself with 30 open tabs and no idea what to do with them. OneTab is an extension that unloads them all and places them into a list.
The purpose of OneTab is to really embrace the world of tabs. OneTab lets you go about your day opening as many tabs as you want, and with a click you can close them all and save them as a simple list. From there, you can save that list as a web page (that you can open later), or restore them all immediately.
OneTab is a way to keep those organised without actually keeping them open.
To learn more about onetab click on the youtube video to the left.
'Too many tabs can be a symptom of loss aversion'