this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2024
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What OP is trying to do isn't impossible it's actually very interesting. There are lots of people who use tab workflows instead of bookmarks. And I think everybody would benefit from better in-browser search. Just because bookmarks is how it was done 30 years ago doesn't mean we can't try new things.
Unless you bring a solution to the table, taking the position that it isn't impossible is just cheap contrarianism on your part. Sure we can try new things, but if it doesn't work and everyone is commenting the approach isn't helping, then maybe take the hint. Or not, and keep swimming against the stream (in which - seeing OP's other comments - they seem to be more interested than actually solving the problem)
Why would it be impossible to search through tab content if it's available in memory?
That's not how it works. Right now the situation is: it doesn't work. You claim it should be a workable situation. Show how it should work, don't ask people to prove a negative.
You dream to small Bookmarks suck and are cumbersome They sucked in 1996 and they still suck today ! Bookmarks have apparently been a crutch to make the browser more usable. Like for instance, instead of discarding a whole tab, keep a text index of the html body and make that searchable. But no, it's an all of nothing thing, either 2gb of youtube javascript per tab, or we only keep URL and tab title.
Also, you don't actually need to bring a solution to the table just to say "this thing is not working right" You don't have to be a mechanic to say "the car is broken" You don't have to be a doctor to say "this person is sick"
Clearly my message just need to be said over and over until it gets implemented. It is obvious where browsers are going. A total web awareness platform that remembers everything you've ever seen. There will be infinite tabs and a local llm will know it all 7 ways from sunday "Firefox, write a song about the 500 first tabs I've seen in June 2017, in the style of a broadway musical"
The resulting song would be useless to everyone, including you. In the hypothetical eventuality where what you're asking for is implemented, only a tiny minority of the tabs you've collected will be of the slightest usefulness to you, ever. Fundamentally, why did you ever open a given tab in the first place? In the case where you ever need to recall it, it will be trivial to open it again in a fresh browser session. You acknowledge googling is easier than managing bookmarks in these volumes, and you're right. That's what you should do. Your current approach is simply hoarding.