Safari tabs - what's your current opinion?

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Posted:
in Mac Software edited January 2014
So when the big "we want tabbed browsing in Safari" debate was on, I hadn't used a tabbed browser, so I didn't have an opinion either way.



I've been using Safari beta 2 as my default browser (as in, I scarcely load any other) just about since it was released, and I've only just noticed how much I've come to rely on tabs: truth is, new windows now annoy me no end and I'm able to comfortably deal with half a dozen pages at once, and converse in as many forums at the same time as I like.



I'm just interested to see how everyone else is getting on.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 27
    mrmistermrmister Posts: 1,095member
    My opinion:



    Until it has contextual menu items that allow navigation it doesn't matter, as I'll be using Camino.



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  • Reply 2 of 27
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    I still see them as a hack on most systems to get around fundamentally flawed window management that we don't have to contend with.



    Having said that, I *do* use them quite a bit myself.
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  • Reply 3 of 27
    chuckerchucker Posts: 5,089member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Kickaha

    I still see them as a hack on most systems to get around fundamentally flawed window management that we don't have to contend with.



    Having said that, I *do* use them quite a bit myself.




    *nods*
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  • Reply 4 of 27
    keshkesh Posts: 621member
    I love 'em. In fact, I'm using tabs to read this forum right now.



    I wonder if you guys would mind explaining the 'flawed window management' you're referring to?
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  • Reply 5 of 27
    lucaluca Posts: 3,833member
    Oh man. It's only been explained like a billion times already.



    So, ah... they say it's bad because it promotes "MDI" which I learned later means "multiple document interface." That's what Windows uses - each window is an individual instance of an application, and instead of switching between applications, you switch between individual windows on a systemwide basis.



    Anyway, I think how it promotes MDI is that it promotes putting everything into a single window rather than having multiple windows for a single application. Which is somewhat windows-like, but I don't understand the "fear" of it because even Microsoft's browser, Internet Explorer, doesn't have tabs.



    Actually, I just completely don't understand the anti-tab people's arguments. They go over my head in trying to convince me that I'm evil for liking tabs... well, one thing is that they say that the title on the window is truncated with tabs whereas in the window menu, you see the whole thing. But usually I only need the first few letters to jog my memory and know what the contents of a specific tab are, and in fact, I don't even usually look at the tab titles. I just command-click a bunch of links that I'm interested in and start reading, and close tabs as I finish reading. So I have no need to look at the tab bar. All it ends up doing is reducing clutter for me, so I like it. Sometimes, I'll browse a number of message boards at once, and it's a godsend there. I'll have a tab open for each specific forum I'm viewing, and a tab for each topic I'm reading... if I had individual windows for each it would be FAR too complicated and I'd probably go insane trying to find what I wanted. Multiple windows are nice if you remember the contents of the page by the title, but I'm more likely to remember the contents of the page by its position, so multiple windows confuse me and tabs make everything better.
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  • Reply 6 of 27
    amorphamorph Posts: 7,112member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Luca Rescigno

    Oh man. It's only been explained like a billion times already.



    So, ah... they say it's bad because it promotes "MDI" which I learned later means "multiple document interface." That's what Windows uses - each window is an individual instance of an application, and instead of switching between applications, you switch between individual windows on a systemwide basis.





    The argument in a nutshell: It breaks the document = window paradigm, much like the OS X Finder broke the window = folder paradigm.



    Currently, there is no consistent, system-wide (and therefore, Mac-like) means to create or manage such things on even a basic level, because the entire interface is geared to assume that a window corresponds to a document. So any MDI interface on a Mac has to be hacked in. It's not just that MDI adds another layer of complexity, or even that MDI breaks the old metaphor; the additional problem is that Apple hasn't introduced a new metaphor that allows MDI interfaces to be used and understood clearly and consistently across applications. The meanings of utterly basic commands like Open, Close, Save and Print used to be perfectly clear, and now they are not, and their behavior is inconsistent to boot. Absolute, system-wide consistency, and a sense that the things you're manipulating are real (in other words, that you can consistently predict their behavior based on a metaphor), are the unequivocal hallmarks of the Mac interface. Anything that does not answer primarily to those goals does not belong on a Mac.
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  • Reply 7 of 27
    lucaluca Posts: 3,833member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Amorph

    The argument in a nutshell: It breaks the document = window paradigm, much like the OS X Finder broke the window = folder paradigm.



    Currently, there is no consistent, system-wide (and therefore, Mac-like) means to create or manage such things on even a basic level, because the entire interface is geared to assume that a window corresponds to a document. So any MDI interface on a Mac has to be hacked in. It's not just that MDI adds another layer of complexity, or even that MDI breaks the old metaphor; the additional problem is that Apple hasn't introduced a new metaphor that allows MDI interfaces to be used and understood clearly and consistently across applications. The meanings of utterly basic commands like Open, Close, Save and Print used to be perfectly clear, and now they are not, and their behavior is inconsistent to boot. Absolute, system-wide consistency, and a sense that the things you're manipulating are real (in other words, that you can consistently predict their behavior based on a metaphor), are the unequivocal hallmarks of the Mac interface. Anything that does not answer primarily to those goals does not belong on a Mac.








    I guess all I can say is that I don't want usability to be sacrificed for the sake of consistency. But not the other way around either... a balance must be achieved.



    I mean, if all your friends jumped off a bridge, would you do it too just because it would maintain the consistency?
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  • Reply 8 of 27
    xionjaxionja Posts: 504member
    I like tabs alot. I use tabs alot.





    I wish that one could set it default to open a tab when you click a link. This would make me a very happy camper.



    Safari is good.
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  • Reply 9 of 27
    lucaluca Posts: 3,833member
    Well you could just set the scroll button on your mouse (assuming you have a two button scroll mouse) to be command-click and then it would open a tab whenever you middle-click a link.
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  • Reply 10 of 27
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Amorph

    The argument in a nutshell: It breaks the document = window paradigm, much like the OS X Finder broke the window = folder paradigm. (snip)



    Actually, I think it's more fundamental than that...



    On other systems, (say, oh, I dunno... Windows, and every window manager that emulates it, say, every freaking thing else...) there is *one* keystroke to switch between windows... regardless of app. So if you have 4 browser windows open, and 16 other windows, you have to cycle through as many as 19 other windows to get to the browser window you want. Heck, assume you have all four windows together, you still have to cycle through 16. (Of course, you can move back and forth with the reverse direction modifier key, but how silly is that?)



    On MacOS X, you move only within the *current* app's windows with the window cycle keystroke. So you'll never jump from app to app like you do everywhere else. It makes *much* more sense.



    So, under other window managers, tabs are a way of getting around the app A -> B -> C -> A -> B -> D -> A -> B -> A flipping that happens when wanting to get to another browser window quickly. It's a completely new UI element that *only* works around fundamental flaws in other elements. I mean, really, it'd be just way too hard to actually fix the flaws, after all... so instead they came up with a completely new system with it's own set of flaws.



    It's a useful UI element in some ways, but it certainly needs some work to be considered elegant. And, it doesn't offer any real fundamental benefits because there aren't any basic flaws to be fixed in Aqua, like there are in other windowing systems.



    So... no major benefit added like on other GUIs, but all the flaws of a less than well thought through UI element.



    And even with all that, I still use them.
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  • Reply 11 of 27
    buonrottobuonrotto Posts: 6,368member
    I can see why tabs are quite useful to people. I think though that it simply points to a very important and difficult problem with the interface. I could probably lay blame at the Dock, though I also like what's good about the dock, it doesn't seem to call people's attention to its document management abilities enough? Ideally, wouldn't the Dock be the perfect spot to handle what these tabs are trying to deal with -- document management within apps? But then OS X is trying to make the system more document-centric instead of it typical app-centric approach from Classic.



    While the interleaving windows and the (potential) sharing of resources among apps and disparate documents is very nice, the flat (non-hierarchical) window management system is a bear to deal with when you're organizing the docs, especially when you have more windows/views then you can see at once on your screen. So there's this -- that word again -- conundrum where working with windows benefits from an interleaving window-centric system, but deeper and more complex window management suffers because when it tries to follow the metaphor. Maybe it's just the inherent limitation of 2D interfaces (and, no, I'm not thing that 3D perspective on a flat-panel monitor is going to solve anything ).



    Is this where we start proposing adding "piles" to our browser?
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  • Reply 12 of 27
    ast3r3xast3r3x Posts: 5,012member
    ahh...not another tabs debate!
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  • Reply 13 of 27
    buonrottobuonrotto Posts: 6,368member
    Mwahahahaha....
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  • Reply 14 of 27
    badtzbadtz Posts: 949member
    safari tabs are great !





    the only time i don't like it, is on that rare occassion when safari crashes & you have all those tabs lined up!



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  • Reply 15 of 27
    aquaticaquatic Posts: 5,602member
    Excellent. They just need debugging.
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  • Reply 16 of 27
    lucaluca Posts: 3,833member
    Yeah, Safari always unexpectedly quits within one minute of visiting Google Images.
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  • Reply 17 of 27
    I love 'em. It would sure be nice to have "moveable" tabs. I like having my stuff in a certain order. Also, it would be so sweet to be able to bookmark a set of tabs, so when I start up Safari I can go right to AI, Dealmac, Macminute, and all the sites I frequent with the click of a button....
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  • Reply 18 of 27
    lucaluca Posts: 3,833member
    Well, right now you can put a number of bookmarks into a folder and then open all of them in tabs from the tab bar. I haven't tried this so I don't know exactly how it works but it seems pretty simple. You just can't create a bookmark of a set of tabs, you have to bookmark them all individually and put them into a folder.



    Being able to move them around would be cool.
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  • Reply 19 of 27
    aquaticaquatic Posts: 5,602member
    Yes moving would be an interesting feature.
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  • Reply 20 of 27
    kelibkelib Posts: 740member
    I like 'em an I use 'em. However my complaints are that I think they are upside down. The Mozilla tabs look more logical to me as they're tied to the page they represent. Another drawback IMO is that when you open a map off bookmarks in tabs with the 'open in tabs' option it closes the page I'm currently browsing. Other than that I think they're great.
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