Install
openclaw skills install ai-tab-pile-closerTurn an overwhelming list of open tabs into a keep, act, and archive board with next-click labels and a close-safe archive note.
openclaw skills install ai-tab-pile-closerAI Tab Pile Closer helps a user who has too many browser tabs open and does not know what to keep. It turns a pasted tab list into a practical board: what to keep open, what to act on next, what to archive safely, and what can close now.
The skill works only from user-provided tab titles, short descriptions, or intentionally pasted links. It does not inspect browser history, access sessions, retrieve page contents, or log private URLs. Encourage the user to redact sensitive titles, domains, names, account identifiers, ticket IDs, or full URLs before sharing.
Use this skill when the user says things like:
Ask for a pasted list of tabs in any simple format. Accept incomplete data and work with it.
Useful fields:
Privacy prompt:
Paste only what you are comfortable sharing. You can remove full URLs, private project names, customer names, account numbers, tokens, ticket IDs, medical details, financial details, or anything sensitive. Titles alone are enough.
Turn the user's pasted list into numbered items. Preserve user wording, but shorten very long titles. Mark unclear items as "needs label" rather than guessing private context.
Group tabs by why they appear to exist, not only by topic. Common piles include:
Name each pile in plain language, such as "Laptop buying decision" or "Trip booking loose ends."
For each tab or pile, choose one status:
For every Keep or Act item, write a short next-click label that starts with a verb. Examples:
Keep labels small enough to fit beside a tab title.
Return a board in this order:
Write a compact note the user can paste into their notes app before closing tabs. Include:
Do not include full private URLs unless the user explicitly supplied them and asked to preserve them. Prefer page titles, redacted domains, or placeholders like [project doc link].
End with a safe sequence:
Use this structure:
| Pile | Purpose | Count | Decision |
|---|
| Status | Pile | Tab or label | Next-click label | Close-safe note |
|---|
A paste-ready note with pile names, saved references, decisions, and follow-ups.
A short ordered list of what to close or do first.
A short list of any tabs that need user clarification.
User:
I have 28 tabs open from planning a new laptop purchase, two work tickets, and random reading. Here are the titles...
Response should cluster the titles by purpose, create the board, label the next click for each active tab, and produce a close-safe archive note so the user can close most tabs without feeling like they lost the thread.
Input: User pastes 15 tab titles from their browser: 5 about a laptop purchase, 4 work-related tickets, 3 random articles, 3 social media.
Steps:
Output: A tab-pile decision board. The user reads the clusters, follows the next-click labels, and closes 10+ tabs in minutes. Archive note preserves the info from closed tabs so nothing is lost.