Your web apps stay logged in and ready, organized into workspaces that keep work, personal, and everything in between completely separate. Switch workspaces in a keystroke. Pick up exactly where you left off.
You don't have too little discipline. You have a tool built to manage pages, not the way you actually work.
Your browser stays your browser. Dockside is a native Mac app that gives the web apps you use every day a dedicated home, alongside Chrome, Safari, and Arc.
Every app stays logged in. Every session picks up where you left off. Open Dockside and your whole day is already running. No tabs to reopen, no passwords to re-enter.
Work, personal, a side project. Each one gets its own apps, logins, and history. Switch between them in a keystroke. Nothing bleeds across.
There are no tabs because you don't need them. Each app has a permanent home in your sidebar. You never close them, never lose them. They're just there.
Three Gmails, two Slacks, and forty tabs become three clean workspaces you switch between in a keystroke.
Each workspace is fully separate. Different logins, different history, different apps. Switch in one keystroke.
Everything has a place.
Gmail is where you expect it. Slack is where you expect it. The apps you use every day stay exactly where they belong.
Workspaces organize your apps. These features organize your day.
Unread counts pile up across every workspace and every app. Hit one shortcut and Dockside stacks them into a single drawer. Clear them in one pass and get back to zero.
Start a focus session and Dockside steps back. The sidebar dims, a timer runs, and your current app gets your full screen. No extensions or browser plugins. Just focus, built right in.
Pull up a reference next to your work. Resize the divider. Stay in one workspace the whole time. No window juggling required.
A workspace for every part of your day.
Dockside doesn't track what you browse, doesn't sync your sessions to the cloud, and doesn't share data between workspaces. Every wall is real.
Each workspace runs its own cookies, storage, and sessions. What happens in your Work workspace stays there. Not a visual boundary, a real one.
Your sessions, your history, your workspace configuration. All of it stays on your machine. No server to trust, no cloud account to create, no database of your habits somewhere.
Private Browse starts a clean session that forgets everything when you close it. The whole interface shifts to red so you always know you're in it. No history, no cookies, no trace.
The category exists. The execution doesn't.