What is tabbed browsing?
I admit that I was a little slow to appreciate the attraction of tabbed browsers. At least part of the reason for that is that Mozilla pages don’t explain tabs very well – there seems to be an implicit assumption that you’ll just immediately understand both how to use tabs and why you’d want to. The “how” is the easiest part. There are several ways to create tabs – once you have a browser that has this feature. If you are using Firefox or some other tab capable browser, right clicking on a link lets you choose “Open Link in New Tab”. You can do the same thing with Bookmarks – right click, and choose the new tab option. That’s great, but if you are new to this, you are probably confused already because unless you look carefully, it doesn’t seem like anything special happened when you did that: the page opened, and so what?
New in Internet Explorer 7 is a feature called Tabbed browsing. This allows users to manage multiple web pages within one browser window. Here’s how it works: First, let’s discuss the many ways you can open a new tab: Method #1: When you initially open a web page in IE7, it will open in a tab. Located to the right of the first tab is a small grey box and when you mouse over and click this box, it will open the next tab. The small grey box will appear to the right of as many open tabs as you wish. Method#2: When you open the first web page, right click on the opened tab and select New Tab. Method#3: With a web page opened. Right click on any hyperlink and select “Open in New Tab”. Method#4: With a web site open, press CTRL + T on your keyboard. A new tab will automatically open. <>Refresh a Web Page: To see the most current information on a web page, simply right click the opened tab and select Refresh. Or, if you have multiple tabs open, you can refresh all of them at the same time by