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How so? I usually have 200-600 browser tabs open for weeks on Windows/ryzen 5000


Have you heard of bookmarks? And if you need a little bit of help with that, Tab Stash comes to the rescue https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/tab-stash/


From someone who sometimes becomes a tab hoarder... Bookmarks get lost, tabs are things you want to keep around until you are done with it. Every now and then I say "eff it" and clear all my tabs and start over, but most of the time I leave them up. It makes it easy to talk to friends about recent stories I just read if its still there in my tabs.


Bookmarks also have considerable management overhead if one wants to keep them usable, largely thanks to browser vendors having either phoned in the design of their bookmark managers or left them stuck in 1999. For some reason an Nth cosmetic toolbar redesign is more important than making bookmark management not terrible.


Exactly. You can't even search within just one bookmark folder in chrome or do fuzzy search. Bookmark manager UX is hot garbage.


Just use history. It has great search. Close your tabs, let go. It’s a history search away if you want it back.


https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37992980

Also no, history has terrible search. You can't search within pages, search within a single folder/window, etc.


This argument has never made any sense to me. Once you get past 30-40 tabs, all that appears on screen is just a series of icons, and repeating icons at that as most tab hoarders I've seen from screen sharing have multiple tabs of the same site open in random locations. Unless you have some sort of photographic memory, it's certainly much easier to bookmarks stuff and organize it than haphazardly scan through a long series of icons to find the right page.


Vertical/tree-style tabs are a must if you're a tab hoarder, I can't imagine living without them.


I save all of my open tabs into a folder.

But now there are built in ways to manage tab groups, which I haven’t used yet, but look neat.


That's where you make a browser extension to dump your tabs before closing all


I have ADHD. None of these work.


That's not a lot tbh. I'm usually at ~1500 tabs (13 windows across 3 win+tab desktops) per machine on both my desktop (64GB 5800x3d) and macbook (32GB M2 Pro).


Why on earth would you do this? Genuine question.


I don't go quite that excessive, but you can keep various projects and activities tracked pretty well. Instead of regretting closing a few stackoverflow pages (which will be a nightmare to search for even with local history) you can leave up the useful ones, so you don't lose them, and close it all once the current task / project is no longer needing them.

I used to make fun of people who hoarded them, but honestly sometimes just keeping that one tab open until you've exhausted its use is worth it.


I can't even imagine trying to locate that "useful tab" amongst 1500 open tabs. My bookmarks by contrast are nicely organized into folders. I can also open an entire folder of links at once, for example, my favorite blogs.


So typically what happens is I'll split out browser windows with tab groups, Firefox used to have a way of doing this from one window, but they scrapped it or its just not default anymore, it was like "Virtual Desktops" but for tabs. It was insanely useful, I think the tabs that were hidden were not even loaded in the background, so they were on standby until you can back to them.


I do something similar, because I can. Why waste time organizing & pruning them when I don't need to? I can just search for open tabs that I need, jump to windows to resume sessions I was working on earlier, etc. At some point it gets too much and I use OneTab to save all my open tabs and start over.


Each project has its own window. Ctrl+tab moves down the call stack and ctrl+shift+tab moves up the call stack. Exploring a topic often requires depth first search and a lot of ctrl+w and clicking "close tabs to the right" after researching subtopics. I've used this approach for over a decade and I've always been able to upgrade my machine fast enough to keep up.

Of course I also use ctrl+e (QuickTabs) to jump faster with intellij-like fuzzy search. It's kinda like Chrome's built-in ctrl+shift+a, except better.


Bragging rights.


Good lord. Now I'm hesitantly curious to know how many unread messages and unopened emails you have.


0 unread replies on the sites I use regularly (HN, reddit, twitter, messenger) and 0 unread emails in the Primary tab on gmail.

I used to be inbox-zero in all gmail tabs a couple of years ago and I will be yet again some day. The main limitation I'm running into is that a lot of useless emails ("We're making some changes to our PayPal legal agreements") have unpredictable subject lines and are sent from the same address that sends useful emails. I already have hundreds of gmail filters that auto-archive useless emails with predictable addresses or subject lines ("Your statement is ready") that I can't unsubscribe from without closing the account. LLMs should solve this problem some day.


Yeesh. I have a 32GB M2 Max and if I hit 15 (that's fifteen) tabs, I'll habitually quit the browser and restart it, if not the whole computer. Any apps in the background get force quit after the last window is closed.

Windows 98-brain is hard to get rid of...


My Windows 9x brain opens as many Netscape/Opera/MSIE windows as I want till 'it' crashes. Nowadays swapping heavily just slows down the machine.


It’s quite clearly a lot. Just not as much as you.


I meant that for a modern machine 1500 is nowhere close to the maximum amount you can have before TLB misses (and later page faults) slow down the entire machine. If a machine with similar specs can't handle that many tabs, something is misconfigured. Eg maybe memory timings are way too conservative or the wrong power profile is in use.


Remember a website can do anything it wants, and that includes leaking 32GB memory.

Browsers have been implementing background tab killing recently though, so just because you have a tab doesn't mean the process is actually backing it anymore.


I've seen the occasional memory leak from Youtube and Twitter, but only once a month. Not a big deal since I try to reboot for security updates every 3-6 months anyway.


1500 tabs easily touches enough RAM that average computers will keep swapping if that's actually your working set. Which is why any good browser should be completely freezing tabs that haven't been active in a while so their memory can remain swapped out, or even completely unloading them.

Though, 1500 tabs in one window is beyond the point at which it impacts Safari's responsiveness, but that's completely unrelated to the contents of the tabs and is instead the fault of taking way too long to update every NSView in the tab bar.


I have one specific TradingView tab that will crash the browser if I try to interact with it. Been that way for weeks.


Yeah my comment is more on memory management in this case 16GB range.

edit: I'm gonna get dinged for OT comment again ha


Weird, chrome freezes daily for me.


On what machine? As I mentioned up thread, if a machine with similar specs can't handle that many tabs, something is misconfigured. Eg maybe memory timings are way too conservative or the wrong power profile is in use.

If you open Resource Monitor before the freeze, you can usually see what happened on the graphs. If you're fast enough, you can also click "analyze wait chain" to see something that looks like a stack trace. The graphs and trace should make it pretty obvious why an app is frozen. Eg maybe it's trying to save the history sqlite database and your SSD ran out of SLC cache.


Seek help


I'm convinced the neurology of these people is setup in a way that they feel physically rewarded from combing through random hoarded stuff to find what they are looking for vs organizing things. It would make for an interesting scientific study as to why some users feel so compelled to keep so many tabs open. Is it FOMO, excellent recall (the only way I can see this being truly useful), or actual hoarding disorder gone digital???

As a person who has terrible short-term memory, I'm genuinely curious. I never hoard my tabs past a certain point 10-20 tabs, it actually slows me down in finding what I'm looking for. If I'm working on specific projects and need to save the tabs for later, I just use tab groups in Chrome and associate with a task so when I context switch, I just open up an existing tab group and close my other non-related ones.

https://www.google.com/chrome/tips/#:~:text=You%20can%20grou....


1) Why so judgmental?

2) As somebody with ADHD, there's an unacceptable level of mental overhead required for organizing things. I simply don't have any spare bandwidth to add organizing tabs into bookmarks and organizing bookmarks or whatever else into my daily functioning as a human being. It has nothing to do with feeling rewarded.


I don’t think it deserves that much armchair psychology. I was joking.




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