news
Firefox Tab Groups
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Mozilla ☛ Tackle tab overload with Firefox Tab Groups
Open a web browser and you step into a garden of forking paths — where news, messages, memes, work, learning and cat videos all compete for your attention. Every click sprouts another tab. Before you know it, your author has opened 68,000 tabs in one year alone, while some people manage to keep 7,000 tabs open for years. Firefox Tab Groups is designed to help you organize tabs, offering a better way to browse.
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Mozilla ☛ You asked, we built it: Firefox tab groups are here
What happens when 4,500 people ask for the same feature? At Firefox, we build it.
Update
Some more on this:
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Mozilla Addons Blog: WebExtensions Support for Tab Groups
Exciting news: with yesterday’s release of Firefox 138, tab groups are now available to all users! Tab groups have been a long standing feature request for users, so it’s wonderful to see this go out to everyone.
New browser features are great, but what’s even better is when they’re backed by WebExtensions Hey Hi (AI) that allow our amazing developer community to deeply integrate with those features. So, without further ado, let’s get into the new capabilities available in this release.
What’s new in 138
Firefox 138 includes initial support for tab group management in WebExtensions APIs. More specifically, we’ve updated the Tabs API with a few new tricks that allow extension developers to create tab groups, modify a group’s membership, and ungroup tabs: [...]
It's FOSS:
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Exploring Firefox Tab Groups: Has Mozilla Redeemed Itself?
Firefox's Tab Groups help you organize tabs efficiently. But how efficiently? Let me share my experience.
Linuxiac:
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Firefox Finally Did It
Three years, 4,500 up-votes, and several dozen beta builds after the first plea appeared on Mozilla Connect (still the number one most upvoted post), Firefox users are finally getting the feature they have been clamoring for: native Tab Groups.
Starting with Firefox 138, the desktop browser lets anyone corral their tabs into collapsible, color-coded collections, trimming visual clutter and—Mozilla hopes—restoring a bit of cognitive calm