That’s where a new window labeling feature in Chrome comes in handy, letting you add custom names that will show up for each window in the Windows taskbar or Mac dock. The only problem with sorting out your tabs into separate windows-and the reason, I suspect, that some folks resist doing so-is that it can be hard to keep track of what belongs in each one. (Related little trick for closing a bunch of tabs while leaving others open: Select the ones you want to close, drag them into a separate window, then close the window.) Name your windows You can also quickly select a range of tabs by holding Shift, then clicking the first and last tabs you want to move. Just hold Ctrl (in Windows) or Cmd (in MacOS) while clicking the tabs you want to highlight, then use the “Move Tab” menu or the drag-and-drop method above. To move tabs in bulk: In any major browser except Safari, you can also select multiple tabs at once, then move them as a group. If you have another window that’s visible while dragging, you can also drag the tab into that window instead of creating a new one. Just click and hold on any tab, then drag it down until it pops out into a separate window. I got this by running hg diff -r 642068 -r 642067on the mozilla source tree.You can also use the drag-and-drop method: Instead of using “Move Tab,” you can also drag and drop tabs between windows in most major browsers. But I just did it to see if it could still be done, and the answer is yes, for now. You'll need to re-zip the contents of omni.ja afterwards, and on the first run afterwards have the MOZ_PURGE_CACHES environment variable set to 1, but that'll do it. The rest should apply, but you'll need to change the path in the patch for the localization files since locales/en-US gets renamed to localization/en-US at packing-time, I think. The patches to /dom/security/test will fail but those are for the testing suite and aren't necessary to run the program. inc file, you have to edit two files that are generated from it at build-time, namely webext-panels.xhtml and browser.xhtml. Right Click over the video Player Select Global Settings Click Delete. Alternately, this is a bit too complicated/technical for most people (so you should probably just use an addon), but if you unzip 'browser/omni.ja' and apply bits and pieces of this patch to the files inside, you can actually revert the change (for now I'm sure it'll get harder to apply as the browser continues being updated).įor the. Mac Firefox or Chrome Users: Press command + shift + R to refresh the page.