![]() ![]() At all times my tabs and history are associated with the same "project". Later I want to open it again and continue where I was. ![]() I want to save my window as "Puerto Rico trip" and close it. What I'd like is to have windows be "named". That's not too useful since there's no way to update this folder the same way. The best browsers can do right now is to bookmark multiple tabs as a folder and then later restore them. Yet I have to keep them open because browsers don't have a way to treat a single window as a kind of persistent tab set. It doesn't make sense to have those tabs open all the time - just when I need them. I will have tabs open for Google Flights, Airbnb, Trip Advisor, Google Maps and so on. I keep lots of tabs open because of "projects".įor example, let's say I'm planning a trip. Maybe I should reply to my friend about this. So it sits there.Īnd for each of these there's the state of "maybe". MDN pages usually fall in this category for me – I'll quickly come back a couple times to the page, but I only know I'm "finished" because I don't come back. ![]() Or you may have finished it, but it's yet to be "garbage collected". Something information you may need to revisit. One of a set of things that represents some pending task.Ħ. Something shared with you, that you feel obliged to respond to.ĥ. Something that interests you, but you are leaving for when you are in some particular state of mind (e.g., ready to read something long and involved).Ĥ. A piece of information you think you may need to be aware of.ģ. bookmarks that represent some navigational shortcut you are creating for yourself.įor tabs, I can imagine different ways of thinking about them:ġ. Like in bookmark research they distinguish between bookmarks that represent something you saved, vs. One user research task is often to give names to ideas that we don't otherwise know how to describe. ![]()
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