Software Alternatives & Reviews

Overcoming Tab Overload

Amna Tabs Outliner dstask histre
  1. 1
    Like a remote control for your everyday workflows. Take back your life from computer overload
    3. Surfing (random things you find when you're browsing) Everything that you do is theoretically a context. But a task is more of an "intentional" context. You already know it exists before you stumble upon it. The way people work today, the browser mixes all three paths together. Therefore you have people struggling with bookmarks, and tab hoarding. It's this lack of "context" separation that confuses people on where things should be placed. However, my belief is that of those three, the surfing stuff is less impactful to lose. By using tasks are organization structure, there's an explicit place for purpose driven work, and where useful information should live. You actually don't have to think about organization. And if you know where things live, then why would you don't even need to search. (also Amna[https://getamna.com] is a hip new tool to try).

    #Task Management #Productivity #Todos 12 social mentions

  2. Next Generation Session, Windows, Tabs Manager and a TooManyTabs Solution That Really Works.

    #Work Management #Bookmark Manager #Work Collaboration 12 social mentions

  3. 3
    Command line todo list with git sync
    2) Save those static "TODO" tabs to a task manager[1] and treat them as tasks. [1]: My one: https://github.com/naggie/dstask/ -- saving the URL in note means I can open the tab in a browser again in a command (open).

    #Task Management #Project Management #Todos 2 social mentions

  4. 4
    Smart Bookmarks, with With Notes, Highlights, History, and Sharing
    Pricing:
    Https://histre.com/ does tree-style web history visualization. This is a personal knowledge graph app I'm working on.

    #Knowledge Management #Research Tools #Bookmark Manager 16 social mentions

  5. This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for permission.
    Yeah, it's a social construct not a feature. You type [1] in the paragraph, and then you type [1]: https://example.com/ at the end of your comment.

    #Software Development #Software Development Tools #Web Development Tools 2399 social mentions

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