How my laptop completely breaking down in the software links to myself creating a new project of 1 trying to maintain a good RAM%, keep my PC as minim

I have it in my memory

or was it @chrisstribbs
or @fooddude

one of you wrote somewhere - to improve,

I should - when turning off my PC at end of day - close on tabs (which I have habit of not doing) e.g. leaving lots of tabs up,

a voice said- I could try to put a simple habit implementation for making this happen,

'well i have tried it in past - but at same time - I get urges,
Like this X tab open about X subject - Is it worth I put it on my list of things to do (has a next action worth or not,

"which - is what causes the bad habit of leaving tabs open - because makes me think it contemplates - if I spend more time on this will give me X benefit but I'm not sure if its worthwhile right now - do you understand?

If a tab has content I actually need to keep — like research, reference material, or something tied to a current project — I use the SingleFile browser extension. It saves the entire page (text, images, layout) as one clean HTML file, and I can save it directly into the folder for that specific project. That way, I don’t have to keep the tab open — I know it’s safely archived and viewable later.

If it’s not something I need now, but I just want to check back on it occasionally (like a product page or news site), I save all open tabs to a bookmarks folder. Chrome lets you right-click on any tab and choose “Bookmark all open tabs” — super handy for temporary collections.

And if it’s neither something I need to save nor revisit? I just close it. No guilt.

This way, closing tabs at the end of the day becomes much easier — because I know valuable content is either saved properly or intentionally let go.
 
If a tab has content I actually need to keep — like research, reference material, or something tied to a current project — I use the SingleFile browser extension
I never herd of it?
do you have the link?
. It saves the entire page (text, images, layout) as one clean HTML file, and I can save it directly into the folder for that specific project.
saves it as a HTML - is that a type of text editor?
That way, I don’t have to keep the tab open — I know it’s safely archived and viewable later.
in HTML?
If it’s not something I need now, but I just want to check back on it occasionally (like a product page or news site), I save all open tabs to a bookmarks folder.
check on occasionally you put all in your browser bookmark- well mine is completed cluttered right now*
Chrome lets you right-click on any tab and choose “Bookmark all open tabs” — super handy for temporary collections.
I use ME browser which doesn't do that,
And if it’s neither something I need to save nor revisit? I just close it. No guilt.
right?
This way, closing tabs at the end of the day becomes much easier — because I know valuable content is either saved properly or intentionally let go.
You are in habit of ' closing all tabs- and it makes your life easier ,
you know it is 'saved (filed) or let go?
 
If a tab has content I actually need to keep — like research, reference material, or something tied to a current project — I use the SingleFile browser extension. It saves the entire page (text, images, layout) as one clean HTML file, and I can save it directly into the folder for that specific project. That way, I don’t have to keep the tab open — I know it’s safely archived and viewable later.

If it’s not something I need now, but I just want to check back on it occasionally (like a product page or news site), I save all open tabs to a bookmarks folder. Chrome lets you right-click on any tab and choose “Bookmark all open tabs” — super handy for temporary collections.

And if it’s neither something I need to save nor revisit? I just close it. No guilt.

This way, closing tabs at the end of the day becomes much easier — because I know valuable content is either saved properly or intentionally let go.

herd - I just deleted my ME bookmarks
(after I exported them to my downlaods folder - where should I put them now

So now I can try - mimicking your system for book marks achieve?

*whilst listening to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQt0hvB_qjc on 24 mins for ~ 5mins
 
If a tab has content I actually need to keep — like research, reference material, or something tied to a current project — I use the SingleFile browser extension. It saves the entire page (text, images, layout) as one clean HTML file, and I can save it directly into the folder for that specific project. That way, I don’t have to keep the tab open — I know it’s safely archived and viewable later.

is that it?

or you could just book mark the page?
If it’s not something I need now, but I just want to check back on it occasionally (like a product page or news site), I save all open tabs to a bookmarks folder.
'might just want to check exactly(occasionally) ? what exactly does that mean? ... herd
Chrome lets you right-click on any tab and choose “Bookmark all open tabs” — super handy for temporary collections.

And if it’s neither something I need to save nor revisit? I just close it. No guilt.

This way, closing tabs at the end of the day becomes much easier — because I know valuable content is either saved properly or intentionally let go.
 
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