- a remote web app;
- available for any browser, including mobile;
- managed collections of links (obviously), quick notes, world clocks
- workspaces, or projects
- keyboard driven filtering (a-la Raycast or Alfred).
It got me thinking – how is everybody else using New tab? What is on your new tab page? Ideally, if you can share a screenshot, e.g. [1], I'd appreciate it a lot.
[0] https://new-tab.vlad.studio/
[1] https://postimages.org/ - you can simply Ctrl-V there.
I don't need a new distraction every time I open a new tab.
[0] https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/empty-new-tab-page...
New Tab
[1]: https://tabliss.io/
[1]: https://gist.github.com/saghm/6caf46436f204199d622d6c4d6a41c...
Yahoo initially began as a links directory, and I thought that was a nice idea, so I made Yayhoo: https://bmsauer.github.io/yayhoo/
I like it a lot. I probably need to update it because I haven't done so in a while.
I've found the overhead in processing the "smart" widgets/links makes the device feel much slower, and was a constant reminder how "old" my hardware is.
On Firefox (my main browser for all non-dev related things) I just use the main screen with the shortcuts - some of them sticky, most are just often visited pages gathered by the browser itself
Ctrl-t only for web and history searches.
Why: new tab is a “click into unknown” ui pattern. With bookmarks bar I see the target right away (unless it’s in a folder ofc). It’s not even that faster, but feels more predictable.
~
I would enjoy moving these features out of my launcher (and the new tab page seems fine): calculator, unit conversion
All of that said, I don't really want a lot. I browse by typing what I wish to visit
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/papier/hhjeaokafpl...
[0] https://p1asm0.notion.site/Change-Logs-1781b2744e61495ba6e87...