u/Virtual-Sleep-5984

Does anyone else use their browser tabs as a massive, anxiety-inducing to-do list?

I currently have about 60 tabs open across three windows.

Every time I try to clean them up, I get this weird anxiety that if I close a tab, I’ll completely forget about that article I wanted to read, or that tutorial I needed for my coding project.

It's like I'm using Chrome as a giant, messy memory buffer. Everyone always says "just bookmark them," but let's be honest, bookmarks are where links go to die. I never look at them again.

How do you guys actually manage this digital clutter? Is there a system to clear your browser without feeling like you're losing important information?

reddit.com
u/Virtual-Sleep-5984 — 22 hours ago
▲ 4 r/praca

Własny biznes w IT. Jak zdobyć pierwszych userów?

Cześć, od pół roku tworzę własne aplikacje. Pierwsza była trochę niewypałem, ale sporo mnie nauczyła. Drugą zrobiłem już z głową i nie popełniłem tych samych błędów. Studiuje informatykę i spędzam sporo czasu przed komputerem i stworzyłem narzędzie, bez którego nie wyobrażam sobie teraz pracy.
Problem w tym, że nie umiem przekonać innych do pierwszego kliknięcia. Wiem, że jak ktoś to zainstaluje, to zostanie, bo produkt rozwiązuje realny problem, tylko właśnie nie wiem jak zachęcić pierwsze osoby. Model jest Freemium i nie wymaga nawet zakładania konta, żeby w 100% z niego korzystać, a wersja Pro z chmurą kosztuje symboliczne 4$/msc.
Macie jakieś rady dla osoby technicznej? Jak przełamać tę barierę i zachęcić ludzi do testów? Zmienić strategię? Będę wdzięczny za wszelkie wskazówki.

reddit.com
u/Virtual-Sleep-5984 — 2 days ago

I got tired of tab managers eating 100MB+ of RAM, so I built one that uses exactly 0MB.

Every time my laptop fans started spinning like a jet engine, it was Chrome. But when I checked the Task Manager, half the RAM was being eaten by productivity extensions and tab managers (looking at you, Workona).

It makes zero sense to use 100MB of memory just to manage memory.

So I built SeshTab. The architecture is entirely different: it doesn't open as a permanent pinned tab. It lives 100% inside a popup.

You click the icon -> save your 50 open tabs into a Workspace -> close the popup.

Background RAM usage drops to 0MB.

It has duplicate detection, continuous auto-sync, and a snooze feature (hide a tab and make it reappear next Monday). It’s completely free and you don't even need to make an account.

If you're a minimalist who hates browser bloat, give it a try.

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/seshtab/defgijmmbdfmjmmimlnpoijbohacbcbf
https://www.getseshtab.com/

u/Virtual-Sleep-5984 — 3 days ago

If you're tired of OneTab looking like it's from 2010, I made a modern, lightweight alternative.

I used OneTab for years to save memory, but the lack of sync, outdated UI, and occasional data loss drove me away. I wanted something modern, but I didn't want the heavy bloat of tools like Workona.

I recently shipped SeshTab to solve this.

Instead of operating as a dedicated tab, it runs completely out of a popup. This means when you aren't actively clicking on it, it uses exactly 0 MB of RAM.

It auto-saves your sessions continuously, detects duplicate tabs so you don't open the same Reddit thread three times, and lets you snooze tabs for later.

No account needed, entirely free. If you're looking for a tab manager that doesn't add to your browser's footprint, give it a try and let me know what you think!

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/seshtab/defgijmmbdfmjmmimlnpoijbohacbcbf

u/Virtual-Sleep-5984 — 4 days ago
▲ 1 r/chrome_extensions+1 crossposts

I kept losing 47 tabs after Chrome crashes so I built a tab manager that lives in a popup (not a tab). Free, no account needed.

Like many of you, I had the "too many tabs" problem. But the real issue wasn't the tabs — it was losing them.

Chrome updates, crashes, accidental closes. 47 tabs. Gone.

I tried OneTab — old UI, no sync, lost data on browser update. I tried Workona — $8/month, 105 MB RAM, felt like overkill.

So I built SeshTab.

The one thing I did differently: it's a popup, not a tab. Open it, use it, close it = 0 MB overhead. No permanent tab eating your RAM.

What it does:
- Auto-saves your session continuously
- Workspaces - save a group of tabs, close them to free RAM, reopen with 1 click
- Tab Snooze - hide a tab, schedule it to come back (tomorrow 9am, next Monday, custom time)
- Command palette (Ctrl+Shift+K) - find any tab, open any workspace, all from keyboard
- Duplicate detection

Free forever, no account needed. Pro ($4/mo) adds cloud sync + AI clustering.

Happy to answer any questions. And if you try it - an honest review on the Chrome Web Store would mean the world to me right now.

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/seshtab/defgijmmbdfmjmmimlnpoijbohacbcbf

u/Virtual-Sleep-5984 — 4 days ago