Warning: Evangelism for breadth-first, or open in background tab, as
the better solution!

I avoid open in foreground because the new page never loads sub-
second, so I'm wasting time if I look at a loading page. Instead I
continue reading down the current page, to try to get through it and
close it (the less open tabs, the better I feel).

The few times I want to read depth-first (=open in foreground), I
either click through normally and try to remember using the back-
button, or -  if I'm afraid of forgetting to do Back later on - middle-
click to "open in background tab" and then go over there (with ctrl-
tab). So that's a two-handed operation :).

For some pages there can be so many outgoing links that repeating
"click through, read, back" gets tedious, and you risk loosing track
of which ones you've already opened. It would probably be a great
habit to then move that page into a new browser window. Problems come
only after you do depth-first for many levels, but at this point my
mental tree is so big that I really don't enjoy depth-first reading
anymore. (Why doesn't the browser visualize this link-tree / click-
hostory for me?!?).

Now, where can I read something to convince me that  depth-first /
open in tab in foreground  is actually useful for more than two levels
of depth?
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