kcmannem Really like Orions tree based tabs. I would like to see it preserve history in a similar approach as well. One example of a browser that does this is nyxt. I've attached a screenshot of its UX.
eirk Seems to work like this: you start on the root (Nyxt browser) you open a webpage: (Wikipedia parrot), creating the first child element of the tree in the parrot page, you go to Australasia, creating the first child of that. from the parrot page, you visit subtropics, and tropics in new tabs, creating the second and third child of the tree back in Australasia, you click on oceania, and go there in the same tab.
Vlad eirk Not sure how this explain what pages the user browsed last week? (the usual purpose of browser history)
eirk So, tab history would probably look like this: empty tab → parrot → Australasia → oceania ↳ subtropics ↳ tropics
eirk there would then be multiple first-level nodes, one for each tab opened. I'm not sure how it would accurately state when and the relative order of history.
kcmannem maybe only the root nodes are sorted by date. After a period of inactivity (the next day?) the tab can be considered a new root node and show up a more relevant point in the history rather then tucked away inside a tree of links.
Vlad kcmannem I think we need to think this through and have detailed specification as it is a pretty substaintail change that is being suggested.