I just saw a coworker with something like 30 tabs open in Chrome. I also know someone who regularly hits the 500-tab limit on their phone, though I suspect that’s more about being messy than anything else.

When I’m researching something, I might have 10-50 tabs open for a while, but once I’m done, I close them all. If I need them again, browser history is there.

Why do people keep so many tabs open? Is there a workflow or habit I’m missing? Do they just never clean up, or is there a real benefit to tab hoarding? I’m genuinely curious. Why do people do that?

    • jaschen306@sh.itjust.works
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      7 days ago

      The CAS speed of memory start to matter once you get above 64gb of ram.

      A system might actually slow down the higher you go if you have slow memory.

      • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zipOP
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        7 days ago

        Oh, so maybe that’s why Linus couldn’t open more than a few thousand tabs in Chrome. He used a server board and 2 TB or RAM, but the system got ridiculously slow when he hit about 10% usage. The whole system was specifically designed to sacrifice speed for capacity, so I guess that was a mistake. There could have also been software related issues with the setup. Who knows. Maybe Windows or Chrome just can’t handle absurd tab counts gracefully.

        • jaschen306@sh.itjust.works
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          7 days ago

          I have about 100 open tabs but its all heavy tabs. Figma, miro, teams, slack, asana, jira, slides, power point, and tons of other heavy web apps.