

When you're moving around pinned tabs, you can only move them among other pinned tabs on the left side.

You can do this for all of your web apps that you keep open all day. To start using this to organize your tabs, all you have to do is to right-click on a tab in Google Chrome and select the "Pin Tab" option. With that in mind, the Chrome browser offers the ability to lock some of your most-used tabs to the left of your browser and shrink the tabs to icon size so that you can fit a bunch of your favorites in a small space. As a result, most people tend to keep their most important tabs on the left, either by default since they were the first tabs they opened or by purposefully tucking their most-used tabs over to the left side so that they don't get nudged across the screen as new tabs spawn.

Since browser tabs spawn from left to right, the first tabs you open are located on the left until you start moving tabs around. I'm talking about the "Pin Tab" feature, and if you're not familiar with it, then I'll give you a quick rundown on why it can be useful and how it works. Google Chrome has a handy little solution that can help with this, and although it's been around for years I've noticed that a lot of users don't realize that it's an option. You get so many browser tabs open that it quickly becomes confusing to find your most-used tabs, such as webmail, social media, and web apps for work.

A lot of power users on the web suffer from tab creep.
