When you're researching something, you may find yourself opening pages that interest you one after another, and before you know it, you have a lot of tabs lined up. Whether you're writing an essay, sending presentation slides, or showing your work to people at home, the ease with which you can convey your message depends on how you use the tools.
It may seem reassuring to see so many open windows, but in reality, it's easy to get confused about where to look. When your screen is cluttered, your mind becomes cluttered as well.
Opening and using are two different things.
Even if you open a lot of tabs, you may not be able to read them all properly. In fact, you may get tired of going back and forth between the pages you want to see.
Keeping only what you need and closing what you don't need will make it easier to concentrate on what you're doing right now.
Reducing it makes it easier to think
Just leave a note or bookmark something to read later. By just narrowing down the pages you need now to just a few, it will be much easier to see.
Children who are good at organizing are good at not only gathering information, but also reducing it.
Look at your currently open tabs and close three that you won't be using right now.
At Digital Kodomo BASE, we value the ability to choose what you need rather than collecting a lot. Reduction is also a power that can be used wisely.
