Lukas Mathis writes “humans mostly use two dimensions to organize and identify things: Space and Time.” And both are exploited terribly by most computer interfaces.
Here’s Firefox’s history view:

And here’s Chrome’s history view. It probably takes just an hour more to implement this and yet, it’s orders of magnitude more useful to the user.

Further reading: Temporal user interfaces by Lukas Mathis
December 23rd, 2009
by Erik
The pictures don’t seem to work…
December 23rd, 2009
by Abi Raja
The Author
Erik, Flickr’s really strange. Sometimes, it works and sometimes, it doesn’t.
December 24th, 2009
by Michael Kaply
The original IBM Web Explorer Browser (before Netscape even) had a very cool history called Web Map.
It showed you a visual history that was tree based and time based. So you could also tell branching.
It was very interesting.
December 24th, 2009
by Abi Raja
The Author
Michael, I couldn’t find any screenshots of the IBM browser. Sounds interesting.
I’ve been meaning to write about having a better view of not just history of pages but also history of tabs (and hence, branching). This video[1] explores that concept pretty well but I can’t recall any other mockups or implementations related to that.
[1] http://www.vimeo.com/2829847
January 4th, 2010
by EmaRsk
Sorry, but I don’t get this. What’s the difference between the two? If it’s that chrome tells the time, please be aware that in firefox history you can add a column with that info (click on the second button after the back-forth arrows). And there’s another one with a hit count, which could be useful, I suppose.
January 12th, 2010
by Abi Raja
The Author
@EmaRsk Columns are bad UI design.