The Student Dashboard: Study Timer, Tasks, and Schedule on Every New Tab


Students open more browser tabs than almost anyone. Research papers, lecture slides, assignment portals, calendar apps, note-taking tools — the browser is the entire work environment. This guide shows how to make the new tab page work for you: a study timer that's always ready, today's schedule at a glance, your task list, and research feeds that surface ideas without pulling you into a scroll.

In this guide

  1. The student layout
  2. Pomodoro — structure your study sessions
  3. Google Calendar — today's commitments at a glance
  4. Tasks — what's due and what's next
  5. Habit tracker — the disciplines that compound
  6. RSS feeds for academic research
  7. Dark mode for late-night study sessions
  8. Useful commands for student work

The student layout

A student's new tab has one job: make it easier to start working and harder to drift. The layout should put the study timer in an unavoidable position, show today's commitments immediately, and keep the task list visible without being overwhelming.

Left column — structureRight column — content
Pomodoro timer (large)Hacker News or RSS feeds
Google Calendar (today)Quote widget (daily motivation)
Todoist or built-in TodosHabit Tracker

The Pomodoro timer in the top-left means it's the first thing you see when you open a new tab during a work session. If it's running, you get back to work. If it's not running, you start it.

Pomodoro — structure your study sessions

The Pomodoro technique divides work into focused intervals separated by short breaks. The widget sits on your new tab and runs in the background — start it before you open your lecture notes or research paper, then get to work.

Study typeRecommended intervalBreak
Active reading / note-taking25 minutes5 minutes
Problem sets / coding assignments50 minutes10 minutes
Essay writing30–45 minutes10 minutes
Exam revision (flashcards)20 minutes5 minutes
Group study sessions45 minutes15 minutes

You can set custom durations in the widget settings — click the timer face to open them. Long work sessions (50+ minutes) are well-supported; the timer doesn't force the classic 25-minute structure if your flow prefers longer blocks.

The timer as commitment device: Starting the Pomodoro before you open your study material creates a small psychological commitment to the session. Every new tab you open during the interval shows the countdown — a gentle reminder of what you're supposed to be doing.

Google Calendar — today's commitments at a glance

The Google Calendar widget shows all of today's events from your open Google Calendar tab. Each event displays the time and title. Past events appear dimmed so the visual emphasis shifts to what's coming next.

For students, this replaces the habit of opening Google Calendar as a dedicated tab to check lecture times or office hours. The events are visible on every new tab — you always know when the next commitment is without switching context.

The widget reads from whichever calendars are visible in your Google Calendar tab. If you share a calendar with a study group or a lab partner, those events appear automatically as long as the calendar is enabled in Google Calendar.

Tasks — what's due and what's next

Pinodock offers two task options: the built-in Todo panel (no account required) and the Todoist widget (for users who already use Todoist).

Built-in todos — type /todo <task> in the launcher to add a task. Open the Todos panel from the dock to see, check off, and manage tasks. Everything is stored locally — no account, no sync, completely private.

Todoist widget — if you use Todoist for your assignments and deadlines, the widget shows today's due tasks read from your open Todoist tab. Keep a Todoist tab open in the background; the widget refreshes it automatically.

For students, a useful task structure is:

  • One task per assignment due this week — each dated to its due date in Todoist
  • One task per reading that needs completing
  • One task per email/follow-up that needs a response

Today's view then shows only what's immediately relevant — not the entire semester backlog.

Habit tracker — the disciplines that compound

Academic success is built on daily disciplines that don't show up on any assignment. The Habit Tracker makes these visible every time you open a tab:

HabitWhy it matters
Study 2+ hoursConsistent deep work compounds over a semester
Review notes same daySame-day review dramatically improves retention
No phone during PomodoroProtecting focus is a learnable skill
ExercisePhysical activity measurably improves memory consolidation
Sleep before midnightSleep is when learning consolidates — not optional

Log habits with /habit <name> in the launcher. The tracker shows streaks and weekly completion rates — the streak number visible on every new tab is a stronger commitment device than any app reminder.

RSS feeds for academic research

The RSS widget aggregates multiple feeds into a single list, refreshed automatically. For students, this replaces checking multiple news and research sites manually:

Subject areaUseful feeds
Computer scienceHacker News RSS, arXiv CS, ACM News
Economics / financeThe Economist, FT, Bloomberg Economics
Biology / medicineNature News, Science Daily, NIH News
PsychologyAPA Monitor, Psychology Today
LawSCOTUS Blog, Harvard Law Review
GeneralLobsters (https://lobste.rs/rss), BBC News

Enter feed URLs (one per line) in the RSS widget settings. Articles are sorted by recency across all feeds. For research-heavy periods, this keeps you aware of developments in your field without allocating dedicated time to news browsing.

Dark mode for late-night study sessions

Type /dark-mode in the launcher to see all 13 theme options. For late-night studying, the most useful flavours are:

ThemeCharacterBest for
SoftWarm grey, gentle contrastLong reading sessions
EspressoDeep dark brown, minimal accentLate-night coding or writing
MochaWarm brown, amber accentsEvening note-taking
MatchaDark green, calming paletteLong study blocks
TaroDeep purple, soft purple textCreative or writing work

Add all to apply the theme across every open tab: /dark-mode all espresso. This themes lecture slides, research papers, and Wikipedia all at once — useful when most of your sources are in the browser.

Useful commands for student work

CommandWhat it does
/translate <text> to spanishOn-device translation — useful for language coursework
/summarise <text>Summarise a paragraph with Gemini Nano — on-device, private
/ask <question>Ask Gemini Nano a question without opening a new tab
/readerStrip ads and navigation from any article — clean reading view
/save <url>Save a research article to the Reading List
/note <text>Append a quick note to the Scratch Pad
+14dCalculate the date 14 days from today — for deadline planning
/currency 100 USD to GBPCurrency conversion for international students

The new tab is opened hundreds of times a week during a semester. Building a dashboard that reinforces study habits, surfaces today's schedule, and starts a focus timer with one click turns the most-opened page in your browser into a productivity ally rather than a distraction gateway.

Build better habits with the Pinodock habit tracker

Pomodoro and focus mode — a deep dive

The complete Pinodock guide