The Great Suspender automatically suspends tabs in the background when they haven’t been viewed for an hour (or any amount of time you select). There’s one more upgraded tab strategy worth considering-one that keeps your tabs in place but manages their memory use to make sure your browser never slows down or stutters.
The service also has a $5-a-month pro plan that gives you advanced features such as the ability to sync your snoozed tabs to multiple devices, to snooze an entire window’s worth of tabs at once, and to use a customizable array of keyboard shortcuts. Tab Snooze is free for the basic snoozing functions. With Tab Snooze, all it takes is a couple of clicks to snooze any tab and then have it pop back up at whatever day and time you want. When that time arrives, the tab will automatically reappear on your desktop to demand your attention. That’s exactly what Tab Snooze does: You simply click on its icon while viewing any web page, and you can then snooze the page to any day and time you want. Maybe you’d prefer to treat tabs like messages in your inbox and snooze away pending items until you’re ready to deal with them. Toby automatically saves your collections locally on your computer-even if you close Chrome or restart your system-and if you opt to create an account with the service, it can sync your data and make it available anywhere you sign in.
Toby brings a series of Trello-like boards into your browser for better tab organization. You can even add in your own notes alongside links. Like OneTab, it can condense all your open tabs down into a single spot for easy organization and safekeeping, but it does so in a card-based format that lets you drag and drop links between multiple boards-in the style of project management apps such as Trello or Asana.
It’s essentially a more modern and capable version of the old (and now extremely dated) OneTab extension for Chrome. If you frequently find yourself drowning in tabs, Toby could be just the life preserver you need.