You quite certainly have many tabs open or pinned that are very useful, but not needed right now. They don’t deserve to be bookmarked, although, are too important to be lost in a browser’s reading list. Toast is a place to save them.
Toast helps you control open tabs by saving & closing the ones that aren’t needed at this exact moment, so you can be more efficient working on one thing at a time.
There are many ways people use Toast, below are a few. If any resonates with you, go ahead and try it. It’s free and takes only 2 minutes to set up.
- Save Quora, StackOverflow, Youtube... findings to reference later
- Organize various Google Docs and Drive file links by client or topic
- Save your research for a new project, degree work, market study, etc
- Collect a list of design, photo, code... examples to send as a single link
- Save and close an entire window to start working on something else
- Open multiple links in a single click (prepare for a webinar or specific type of work)
- Move open tabs from one browser to another. All together.
Save every link that’s useful to you. Organize it however you want.
For those, who are tired of massive full-page tabs or bookmark managers, and are looking for alternatives, Toast can be an unexpectedly interesting solution thanks to its native, minimalistic design and the largest browser support.
Need help? Email us: dotoast.com@gmail.com
*About PRO billing*
With the PRO account, you can have an unlimited number of folders. Synchronize them across iPhones, Macs, or other browsers such as Chrome, Oper, Edge, and Firefox. Plus other great features.
Your iTunes account will be charged after 14 days free trial as you confirm the PRO purchase.
The App Store will automatically renew your subscription after 1 year unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24 hours before the end of the current period.
You can turn off auto-renew in your Apple ID Account Settings any time after purchase.
Toast for Safari: Tab Saver - Can read and alter sensitive information on webpages, including passwords, phone numbers, and credit cards, and see your browsing history on the current tab’s webpage when you use the extension. (Who in their right mind would allow this?)