What problem TabStax solves
The web has exploded into a million pages, but your actual work lives across many tabs and tools at once—not on a single website. Every time you return to a project, you rebuild context from scratch: reopen tabs, re-find docs, try to remember “what was I doing here?” There’s no natural way to package all of that context—tabs, resources, half-formed thoughts—into one named place. TabStax changes that. You don’t have to rebuild context anymore.
TabStax exists because:
- You keep reopening the same tabs for the same project. Amazon, Etsy, wish lists, price comparisons—every time you sit down to finish Christmas shopping, you start from zero.
- Your work is spread across tools with no single entry point. The brief is in Notion, the slide deck is in Google Slides, the data is in three dashboards, and you’re holding it all in your head.
- You can’t easily show someone else the whole context. When a teammate asks “what’s the status?”, you send five different links and hope they piece it together.
- Rabbit holes burn time without producing a next action. You research for an hour, close 30 tabs, and still don’t know what to do first when you come back.
- Unfinished projects loop in your mind. Your brain keeps reminding you “don’t forget that car insurance thing” because there’s no external system you trust to hold it.
- Context switching drains you. Every mental rebuild—”Where was I? What tabs did I have open?”—costs attention and breaks flow.
How you’ll think differently
With TabStax, you shift from treating the web as individual sites to treating it as problem spaces you can save and reopen.
- From thinking in websites → to thinking in problem spaces. Not “I need that Amazon page,” but “I need my Christmas Shopping workspace.”
- From rebuilding context → to reopening a named Stax with next actions. One click and every tab, every resource, every next step is exactly where you left it.
- From rabbit holes and endless research → to captured workspaces that end in a clear action. You close the Stax knowing exactly what you’ll do next time.
- From solo mental load → to shareable entry points for collaborators. Your teammate opens the same Stax and sees the same setup, same next actions, same context—no explanation needed.
- From decision fatigue → to trusted external systems. Your brain stops looping on “don’t forget” because the Stax holds everything.
Now you can…
Now you can stop rebuilding context and start reopening it—with one click, exactly where your brain left off.
Next steps:
- What you see the first time you open TabStax – your first experience after installing
- The TabStax Mental Model – understand the big idea: think in problems, not tabs
- Creating your first Stax – step-by-step guide with a real example