We recently came across this wonderful in-depth review of Horse Browser, written by digital product designer, Philipp Temmel. Originally published on Creativerly, we are re-posting this edited version with the kind permission of Philipp himself. You can check out the full, original review here or read Philipp’s excellent deep-dive look into the current state of browsers here.

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Browsers are weird

Browsers make the internet more accessible. They should provide a user-friendly interface for accessing and navigating the World Wide Web. Over the years, the browser became an incredible powerful piece of software. You can pretty much do everything within a browser – designing, writing, 3D, music production, image editing, video editing, programming, and more. However, somehow it does not feel like browsers were made for those kind of workflows, at least not exclusively. We did not get much innovation from major browsers like Safari, Chrome, Edge, or even Firefox over the course of the last couple of years. In contrary to that, we did get a wave of new browsers that were trying to disrupt the market…

Finding the right browser is an incredible overwhelming task… There are so many options. And while I managed to filter out a couple of them, I still do not feel like I found the one solution. I am not sure if there is actually one without making compromises. Browsers feel weird, and Tyler Sticka wrote a great round-up on why they do so

Entering Horse Browser

I stumbled across Horse Browser already a couple of months ago. I always get excited when I find out about a new browser, however, Horse was special. I immediately got attracted to it because of the visual design language on its website. I loved the leafy color tones, the simple typography, the icons, and the little details. Horse is an indie browser built by Pascal Pixel who is taking care of design and engineering, and Elly McKeown, taking care of marketing and the community.

The makers of Horse Browser, Pascal Pixel and Elly McKeown

The makers of Horse Browser, Pascal Pixel and Elly McKeown

Horse entitles itself as The Browser for Research although to me it feels more than that. It is a minimalist browser, designed for work. While browsing through Horse's homepage, it raised some valid and interesting points regarding why modern internet browsers keep us distracted rather than helping us focusing on our work. Most popular browsers are places to load websites rather than organising tasks, managing projects, and getting things done. Whenever I am entering a browser and open up some tabs, those tabs are usually part of something I am currently working on. You can probably entitle those tabs as projects. However, working across those tabs sometimes makes it hard to stay focused.This is where Horse Browser's core feature comes to help. Horse Browser organises your internet with Trails.

Organising everything with Trails

When you browse the internet with Horse Browser,* you get to experience a super simple and minimal sidebar that organises every page, task, and project inside so-called Trails. Trails are nested groups of pages, capturing your natural flow of each internet journey. You can unfold, organise, name, or fold away those Trails with a single click. Trails is an interesting feature with the goal to give you the power to take control of all your tasks while working in the browser.

The so-called Trails in Horse Browser, a tree-style tab navigation

The so-called Trails in Horse Browser, a tree-style tab navigation

No matter what your use-case is, Horse Browser and its Trails feature can support your workflows in multiple ways. You can create a Trail for each project or client, and within that Trail you can be sure to find any document, email, web page, or invoice. By setting up a Trail for all your social media apps, you can quickly glimpse into our timelines. A Trail with your favorite news websites helps you tracking breaking stories in a single place, and it allows you to quickly fold your articles away to read later. Now, at this point I felt like I could achieve the very same in Vivaldi, or Arc, or SigmaOS, or any browser that supports folders, tab groups, or something similar. In Vivaldi, I use Workspaces to separate the projects I am working on most of the time. Within those workspaces, I use Tab Stacks to group and pin tabs to the top of the sidebar for easy and quick access. As an example, in my Personal workspace I have a tab stack called Reading in which I pinned tabs for Refind, Readwise Reader, Readwise, Omnivore, and 12ft, as I visit those on a daily basis. I am also able to fold and unfold those tab stacks to hide or show all the tabs inside.

So, I asked myself what makes Trails different, and what makes them so special that Horse is calling them the perfect productivity system. It was time to dig a bit deeper.

The video that is playing within the hero section of Horse Browser's website gives a great example of what makes Horse and especially the Trails feature so special, and such a unique navigation systems. Horse Browser took Tree Style Tabs as a design starting point, re-thought the approach, and introduced an innovative method of browsing. While browsing, Horse Browse captures a trail of pages, which means it merges tabs, history, and bookmarks into one easy-to-read vertical layout. The powerful thing about this is that there are no more cluttered tabs, and no need to try to remember random pieces of information as you leave a page behind. The major difference to a traditional browser offering workspaces, tab groups or stacks, is that Trails are designed to be an intuitive navigation method to take away the mental effort of tab management. Once you dive deep into online research, Trails feel like an incredible productivity boost.

How Trails are working within Horse Browser

I recently wrote about The State (and issues) of AI-powered writing apps, and to write and research for that article, I exclusively used Horse Browser*. I opened a new Trail and initiated a search to open the first page on the Trail. As soon as I clicked on a link from the search results, Horse Browser opened it up as a nested page on the Trail. So, if I open up an article about why you should not use AI-powered writing apps, I read through it, and suddenly find an interesting link I would like to click on, Horse Browser opens that page immediately again as a nested page. The Trailhead is the parent Trail, in that example the initial search query, the article became a SubTrail, and is connected to the Trailhead.

While doing research, you often find yourself clicking back loads of times to find a specific link you are looking for. Horse Browser completely removes that mental load, as every single link you click on is part of your Trail, easily visible within the sidebar.

Retracing your steps of your whole research is an incredible powerful thing, and pure joy to experience. This is where Horse Browser shines. It creates a minimal, focused, and simple space that helps me to get rid of any noise and instead dive deep into a topic, research, and be productive. Once I experienced Trails within Horse Browser, I realized what I was missing when doing heavy research in Vivaldi. Actively managing loads, probably hundreds of tabs is time consuming and mental load. While I create even more tabs in Horse Browser, it feels so much more lightweight, cozy, and manageable, since it needs a single click to hide away the Trails or SubTrails I finished working on.