Besides, you'd gladly pay more if you knew what it can do for your (organization, focus, workflow, training, management, many hats, sanity. Each workspace can do a lot, and learning to use less is to your benefit. as others have pointed out, the free version is limited to 10 workspaces. That cost me a night of sleep and two pots of coffee, so maybe they could make it easier? One last point. I've managed to combine a few other extensions and get Workona to link to network shares and even edit in place. I would also like to see customization options like themes, webframes & embedded content (say, for monitoring dashboards, chat, and sharepoint). Hopefully, they won't try to do it all and will let us integrate with our own task apps. It is a minimal Chrome tab suspender extension. Now that tasks and notes are added (how can you really manage a session without that?), I'm gonna say it's a keeper. In case you are on the lookout for a proper suspender alternative, let’s start with Tabby. Other extensions will sometimes conflict with Workona, so I use SimlpeExtManager to turn off known offenders as needed. Teamsync Bookmarks was off to a good start for syncing team resources, but when Edge (for Work) started syncing extensions it was too much trouble to stop duplicates. Cloud based managers are just too slow for most people at work. Other interesting Firefox alternatives to The Great Suspender are Tab Wrangler, UnloadTab, Dustman and Total Suspender. I settled on Workona because the interface is local (fast), the data is in the cloud (sync/backup) and the developers keep the features coming. If that doesn't suit you, our users have ranked more than 10 alternatives to The Great Suspender and seven of them are available for Firefox so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement. I've tried a bunch of tab managers (maybe dozens) as I've stumbled my way through social distancing and virtual teamwork in my small business. What you describe is a solution for non-linux users, thanks for help them out btw.AdaptableHachiman's Experience If you do a lot of research, learn on the fly, manage others, or you're just sick of your browser's bookmarks, try Workona. I use some sites that update there ad services regularly, after I catch the first end point websites, I examine the page source for their javascript include, and block that, easily gets a month or more (looking at 2 years on one site). " anywhere on your system, not just Chrome (or FireFox if you use that). it gets processed every time there is ANY "connecting to. etc/hosts uses no extra resources, except the space the file takes up. (from: How to Clear RAM Memory Cache, Buffer and Swap Space on Linux)Īll that stuff might be well and good, but there it adds resources and requires extra cpu time, and probably server pings for tracking too. Exiting X-Windows is not enough to free swap memory, but it will free up used memory. You can manually free any used virtual memory, unless you would rather do a sudo restart. On a regular Raspberry Pi this is because of limited main memory, swap being on a usb device, and a web browser use of cache and/or internal task management, also on a usb device (being the same usb device). With SystemD it does not seem to greatly enhance operations to exchange the (Raspian) default 100Mb swap file with a dedicated swap partition, as it does with other init daemons, but even those will succumb to the inevitable kernel swap lock if you run any web browsers for extended periods. Newer kernels seem to hit this problem extremely quickly, and appears worse on SystemD based systems. Most kernels can get into (what I call) kernel swap lock, espectially with web browsers, especially when pages contain flash objects. One or Two of these sites in tabs/windows will still get you best performance, most of the time, if you're patient.Įven without Flash content and FAT web pages, over time the browser will become slower to respond to web content and clicks, can be between 2-4 hours, so shut it down periodically, clean the cache, start it up again. Be aware that FAT websites can kill your browser, quickly putting it into kernel swap lock. A lot of blogging sites and news sites are FAT. Any site that uses Wordpress default (read: common) themes is FAT. You cant do this in Chrome 55 (look through /usr/bin/chromium-browser), and if you use Gmail on another computer, clicking use standard html interface is a better option.į is FAT. On Chrome 54 and below, you could "not log out" (by shutting the window), and just url back into Gmail because the cookie was kept. If you use Gmail, then stop the page load process and click the use standard html interface, which can also be set as your default interface. Limit maximum open windows and tabs, and FAT WEB PAGES:Įspecially if you use pages with Flash objects, limit you browser to 5 tabs (or 2 windows).
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