• @[email protected]
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    1307 months ago

    That ain’t no power user, that’s a lazy tech who needs to clean up after himself and close a browser window every once in awhile.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Of course the tabs would just come back up next time they open the browser window again. Can’t risk losing those precious tabs, there might be an important one among them.

      Signed, a tab hoarder.

      • Ech
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        207 months ago

        As a previous tab hoarder, excessive use of bookmarks is the answer. Organized is more useful, but even a single bookmark folder for all of your “I’ll need this later” tabs will do wonders for you, and being a bookmark hoarder is so much more functional than being a tab hoarder. You can actual reset your browser every once in a while.

        • @[email protected]
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          37 months ago

          But then I’ll have to take an explicit action to keep my tab! I’d much rather have no action required to save that tab that I’m likely to never visit again.

        • @Cossty
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          07 months ago

          Why not both? I currently have around 400 tabs open, and I cant even count how many bookmarks I have.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 months ago

      Yeah, I have a mental cutoff somewhere around 200 tabs. I don’t count them, but I routinely so a “close to the right” and get 100+ in the “are you sure” pop-up. I do this about every week or two… And yes, I close a lot of tabs as I go.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        I just close them every day when I shut down my PC.

        If I need one back I just re-open them.

        If one of them really is that important that I need it multiple time, I create a bookmark for it.

        Sometimes I even close my browser multiple times a day in order to clear all cookies since that is the easiest way. (Firefox setting)

    • @[email protected]
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      17 months ago

      Everyone uses tech in their own way.

      You and I might only have a few tabs open, this person has a lot.

      It’s easy to be critical of them, but whatever.

      Maybe it’s like saving shortcuts or files to the desktop. Seems ridiculous but if that’s how nan wants to do it who cares.

  • @Coldgoron
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    417 months ago

    What an idiot, thats why I have 7,400 bookmarks that I never intend to sort.

    • @[email protected]
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      67 months ago

      Once you realize that you don’t sort or ever even revisit them, you can start using the browsing history to serve the same purpose.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          That’s where I finally arrived at. I used to use browser bookmarks a lot, but I realized I either never used them or spent way too much time sorting them (so searching the Internet became faster). I tried history, but that sucks when I have like 100/day.

          Tabs work, and Firefox can point to an open tab in the omni-bar, so why not use it? So I often have 100-200 tabs open on an average day, and occasionally clean that down to 10-ish (I’m often back up to 50 by the end of the day). Vanilla Firefox has pretty good tab management features (shift+click to select a range, close to the right, the drop down menu on the right, tab pinning, tabs open across devices, etc).

          • @[email protected]
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            17 months ago

            That’s an interesting way to use that feature. Must be because we use the same app in very different ways.

            For me, the tabs contain only the things that I need today. Having a tab older than 3 days is very rare. Bookmarks contain only a few links, but I actually visit them frequently, so they sit in the bookmark bar. History contains everything else, and I don’t visit that place very often. When I need to dig through the history, I just sort it by last visited and use a search word to filter out the irrelevant stuff.

            It wasn’t always like this, but here’s what works for me these days. In the past I had a list of curated bookmarks, but eventually I realized I don’t really need them for anything.

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago

              The thing is, I use something like 30+ new tabs every day. Half of them are temporary, so I close most of them, but the other half need to stick around for 2-3 days (sometimes longer) because they’re relevant to what I’m working on.

              After a project, I rarely need to refer back to them, so there’s no sense bookmarking them. So I usually only need tabs for 5-10 days. So I just leave them open until the project is done, and then close everything en masse. Usually that’s 50+, but sometimes around 200, depending on the project.

  • @BananaTrifleViolin
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    337 months ago

    How is that a “power user”? That’s just a poor way to use the browser. It’s basically just 7400 bookmarks in one long list; you can’t even group/nestle book marks on Firefox.

    A power user would use something called “bookmarks” to organise that better.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    This must be her “superpower base”

    messie computer room

    I have no idea why anyone would do that, but for the bookmark collectors, checkout “404 bookmarks” which detects websites that are down.

    Having a way to automatically use an archived version would be lit though

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    I feel like a power user would have a clean and clear bookmark game, not thousand of tabs… How the hell do you even navigate into this mess? I’ve just re-organise my bookmarks and folders, imported them in nextcloud, and I feel like I’m the master of the internet.

  • @[email protected]
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    187 months ago

    i appreciate ff can do this and all, but isnt this usecase covered by you know, the browser history?

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        I find bookmarks simply useless compared to tabs. Massive cognitive burden to sort and categorize. Also can’t search the content text.

        I prefer textfiles full of urls more than bookmarks

      • @[email protected]
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        -27 months ago

        I find bookmarks simply useless compared to tabs. Massive cognitive burden to sort and categorize. Also can’t search the content text.

        I prefer textfiles full of urls more than bookmarks

    • @[email protected]
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      57 months ago

      Well, no. Firefox deletes entries older than 6 months from history and there’s no way to change this or to export the data.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            They said you can merge without conflicts:

            Making a backup every 60 days seems to be sufficient to keep all history. sqlite doesn’t reuse old ids (I think?) so merging the backups shouldn’t be too hard.

            But they haven’t tested it, also I wonder if once you do that successfully, Firefox will just delete all the extra records at the next startup, so idk

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago

              The entries would still be datestamped and as firefox clears up the history the older ones would be deleted.

              In my other comment I linked something that said firefox just starts tidying up as performance starts to degrade, rather than a fixed limit of history entries.

              Therefore, if your history is more or less full, and you just import a heap more history, firefox is just going to “tidy up” everything you just imported surely.

      • mac
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        7 months ago

        You can change how often it deletes history items, I’m sure I’ve done that before

      • 2xsaiko
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        17 months ago

        Mine has history going back to Nov 2022 (though I’m not entirely sure why it stops there).

    • AlexisFR
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      57 months ago

      Of bookmarks, I always have like 20 tabs max open at once, I feel alone.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 months ago

      Same How do people navigate all those tabs? Or do they always open a new one? It’s SO much clutter

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      I have three pinned tabs, and about 10 more important ones. Here’s what I generally have open:

      Pinned @ work:

      • Jira
      • Okta
      • Postman (I’m a BE dev)

      “Essential” tabs at work:

      • about 5 main Github repos (we have over a dozen, but I mostly stick to those)
      • a couple Confluence pages
      • a couple Google Docs
      • QA test run page

      Pinned at home:

      • email
      • wavemaker - creative writing, and I always forget the hostname

      “Essential” tabs at home:

      • my gitlab
      • a couple game wikis
      • FOSS projects in development I depend on

      I can get to pretty much everything else quickly with DDG bangs or memory.

      So at work, a “clean” browser is mostly filled with tabs, and at home it’s about half filled with tabs. I keep the essential ones on the far left, so “close to right” generally works well.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 months ago

      Yeah same. Discord, gmail and whatsapp web, plus whichever ones I’m actively using. And those will be closed by end of day at the very latest.

  • @[email protected]
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    157 months ago

    A Mozilla rep confirms to PCMag that having tons of Firefox tabs open consumes “practically no memory whatsoever.”

    Is there an extension to change this? I literally want to keep all of my tabs in memory no matter what. It drives me nuts when I change tabs and it reloads the page, or the bank website will only load slowly while I’m looking at its tab.

    • @calcopiritus
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      87 months ago

      I’m not sure if it fixes your problem, but it fixed mine.

      Pin the tab.

      In my case, Whatsapp web didn’t get loaded when I opened firefox, so notifications didn’t reach me unless I opened the tab at least once.

      If the tab is pinned, however, it will load when you open firefox, I’m unsure if the tab stays loaded.

  • @something_random_tho
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    7 months ago

    I understand it since switching to vertical tabs via Sidebery. You can organize them into panels/groups/nested hierarchy, and tabs are only reloaded when you open them, so it’s not as if you maintain 7k tabs in RAM. Think of it more like bookmarks that are actually organized and useful. It’s what bookmarks might have been if not for Pocket.

    • @Passerby6497
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      97 months ago

      Not heard of sidebery, but totally relate as a Tree Style Tabs user. That and multi account containers means I regularly have a couple hundred tabs per window…

  • @[email protected]
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    137 months ago

    I have only 64gb so 1500-2000 with about 60 addons the practical limit. Really wish wevhad better management tools and VM like controls for tabs. There is still headroom in the system but the problem is operations that wake up too many tabs too fast

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        I can’t deal with vertical tabs, I use tab manager plus in full tab plus list view.

        Unfortunately, the addon is abandonned

    • @Tarqon
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      17 months ago

      There is no real limit on a browser that properly suspends tabs. It would take millions.

  • kratoz29
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    137 months ago

    TIL my dad is a power user with his “:D” tabs in Chrome on Android /s

  • @force
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    7 months ago

    ADHD moment

    “I have so many topics I want to look at at once!” proceeds to get distracted with one of them and forget about all the others

    • SinkingLotus
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      37 months ago

      Out of sight out of mind.

      That’s my problem. Three screen setup. I have three browser instances open.

      Instance 1: YouTube. (Left screen) Instance 2: Gaming wiki’s and info for the game I’m currently playing. (Right screen) Instance 3. Online courses and study materials. (Right screen. I swap between instance 2 and 3 based on what in currently doing on my main monitor).

      I’ll constantly delay or forget to study just because it’s not the currently opened in the foreground.