My Firefox Extension Favorites

I’ve actually been able to refer several people to some very helpful Firefox extensions in the recent past. Since I keep recommending some of the same ones over and over, I thought it was about time that I put together a list, so that I could share some of my experiences with the world, and hopefully benefit a few of you poor souls out there.

Obligitory Mumbo Jumbo: These extensions have worked flawlessly for me, a true credit to their authors no doubt. That’s not to say that any of them are supported by the Mozilla Foundation, their authors, or myself. Just because I’ve had good luck, doesn’t mean you will… Always use caution when installing unknown extensions, as a less than moral extension author could really bring down a whole world of pain on your browsing experience… I’m providing links directly to the author’s website for further information, but also a download link (if available) to obtain the extension from the Mozilla Update service for security reasons.

All-In-One Sidebar
The A-I-O Sidebar provides a cool “toolbar” on the left side of your Firefox screen. When you click on a button on this veritcal “toolbar”, you get a convenient side-pane containing the information. I have my Extensions, Downloads, etc., all listed in the Sidebar instead of their own seperate windows. It’s pretty customizeable, I just wish I could force everything to open in it when I hit a hot key…

Download from Mozilla Update

CustomizeGoogle
The CustomizeGoogle extension adds some very helpful links to every Google search page, allowing you to quickly check other search engines and websites for the same search query. I’ve only ever used it to quickly check Yahoo!, but it also includes Ask Jeeves, AllTheWeb, MSN, Feedster, Bloglines, and a few others. It also removes ads and a few other things that I haven’t really noticed.

Be warned that this has been reported to cause problems with the Personalized Google Homepage. Some of the Javascript functions (erm, AJAX) won’t work correctly with this extension installed, or so it’s been claimed. I don’t use this service, so I can’t say, but if your homepage magically stops working, try dumping this extension.

Download from Mozilla Update

Fasterfox
Fasterfox promises to improve your browsing speed by “intelligently” snagging pages linked to by the page you’re currently viewing, so that they’re already cached for immediate display when you click the link.

I really don’t know how well this all works, and I haven’t had the time (motivation?) to do any kind of actual testing. I like it because it also tacks on a cool status bar indication of a page’s load time.

Download from Mozilla Update

Feedview
Feedview does one simple thing, and it does it well. For those of us whom subscribe to a lot of RSS / XML feeds, we can get sick of the unparsed, horribly ugly “stylesheet unavailable” Firefox-native XML-tree display format, Feedview adds some pretty styling. It also includes a cool Javascript (erm, AJAX?) slider to increase or decrease the amount of “preview” text shown. This is the most recent addition to my collection, but none the less valued.

Download from Mozilla Update

Furl Tools
This one won’t be of any use to you unless you religiously use the LookSmart Furl service. It adds 2 convenient icons to your toolbar: one for “Furling” the current page (which opens a small popup for more details), and two a button that spawns a drop-down of other Furl-related links, such as the one to your archive.

Not on Mozilla Update

Google Toolbar for Firefox
You knew it was coming somewhere here. Even if I don’t totally believe their ‘do no evil’ mantra these days, it’s still very useful. Besides, I like seeing a PageRank for my blog say ‘4′. Hey, you get your ego boosts where you can, right?

Not on Mozilla Update

Onfolio
Before I switched to Linux on my primary machine, this was my favorite feed reader of all time. Sadly, as Windows went, so did Onfolio… I’ve yet to find another feed reader that lives up to Onfolio’s expectations. Furl has replaced its clipping abilities for me now, but somewhat more clumsily and without the romanticism of the past. I’m not really using it anymore, but it felt good to have my orange Onfolio icon back…

Not on Mozilla Update

PDF Download
PDF Download is probably the single most important extension I have. Looking at the simplicity of its function, that really says a lot. Since Adobe’s Acrobat has become such a plague of the internet (much like Flash and Shockwave), many Firefox users have dealth with the pain and agony of a frozen browser when they were simply trying to close a PDF that had opened in one of the tabs. Welp, PDF Download is to the rescue! Every time you click on a link it sees pointing to a .pdf file, it’ll throw up a warning, providing you with several options, including: Download instead, Open in new Tab, and View as HTML. Absolutely a godsend!

Download from Mozilla Update

ScrapBook
Like Onfolio, ScrapBook provides webpage clipping and saving. Also like Onfolio, it’s been replaced in my toolkit by Furl, but I still seem to install it as a matter of habit. If you can’t get behind the web-based Furl, and don’t want to use Onfolio (are you THAT cheap?), ScrapBook is for you!

Download from Mozilla Update

SmoothWheel
I got SmoothWheel for one simple reason. FeedLounge uses auto-scrolling CSS DIV tags to display data, and Firefox won’t natively support scrolling with the mouse-wheel in these containers. SmoothWheel is designed to smooth the “jumpy” scrolling inherent to just about every browser known. A convenient side-effect is that it also enables scrolling in CSS created objects.

Rumor has it that the CSS-scrolling functionality is included in Firefox 1.5, but this isn’t verified. When you upgrade your extensions after the release of 1.5, you may want to check to weed out some clutter.

Download from Mozilla Update

Web Developer
I write web-code… A lot of it. Probably way more than I should admit to without being able to show any kind of return on my investment. What can I say, it’s a fun hobby? The Web Developer toolbar provides countless utilities for anyone actively designing websites. From simple access to W3C validators for your code, to CSS outlining and editing, to Form altering on the fly, it’s an extension I’ll often forget to install, but not for long…

Download from Mozilla Update

That’s it folks! 11 extensions that come highly recommended by yours truly. I’ve got them running on 3 seperate Firefox installs, and haven’t had a problem with them, but that’s not to say you won’t. Best of luck, and please let me know if you find any dead links or think I should try out an extension I’m not using regularly! I don’t usually go poking around for extensions, just pick them up as they’re recommended, so I’d love to hear about any you use!

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10-11-2005
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6:19 pm
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Amazon Goodness

Ed Bott had some funny Amazon links on his blog earlier

The security set may be funny in itself, but the reviews are absolutely hysterical… If you don’t read anything else I recommend to you today (and really, what else have I?), go read the ones for that delightful Playmates product!

Oh yeah, and check out my name! Always cool to see! :)

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5:41 pm
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James Blunt

I used to be a hard-core iTunes user… Every “New Music Tuesday” found me downloading their latest free song of the week. As time has passed and I’ve found I didn’t like several of their musical selections, I’ve become more cynical and bitter about which ones I check out. I’m glad I picked up this week’s free download though… In fact, it lead to the purchase of his entire album.

High by James Blunt is currently available on the iTunes Music Store as their Free Download Single of the Week. I’d highly recommend it.

His album Back to Bedlam really reminds me of the style of Jeff Buckley, with something else mixed in, which I can’t seem to put my finger on…

One of the best $10 I’ve ever spent at the iTMS, by far… “Wisemen” has played about 30 times now in my car’s CD player. If only I could find a 4gb white iPod nano around here…

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10-9-2005
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12:01 pm
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Hey InsideMicrosoft… What about OneCare?

I was reading a few old posts from InsideMicrosoft, and saw their news about Microsoft Antigen being released next year:

Microsoft will be releasing its antivirus product, based on software aquired from Sybari, in 2006. Called Microsoft Antigen, a beta is expected by the end of the year, and pricing has not been announced.

Well then you want to tell me what the fuck OneCare is then?

Looks damn similar to an antivirus product (albeit not a very good one, but I still need to finish that blog rant and get it posted)… Or has it been lying to me for 2 months now telling me it’s been scanning for them?

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10-8-2005
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8:00 pm
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Caching a Thin Client’s Data for Offline Use?

As I continue to read through my backlog of Scoble’s posts (backwards), I find older and older stuff that peaks my interest. In this post, Scoble discusses the comments made by Jonathan Schwartz, Sun’s COO, which we’ve all probably heard by now:

Or finally, as I did last week at a keynote, ask the audience which they’d rather give up – their browser, or all the rest of their desktop apps. (Unanimously, they’d all give up the latter without a blink.)

Scoble provides a simple thick vs. thin client example: Outlook. The 2003 version of Outlook Web Access (the server-side web-based version of Outlook) kicks ass. It’s honestly almost exactly like the actual Outlook install. If we were running 2003 at work, you better believe I’d push like crazy to dump the actual Outlook client and have 90% of the company run it over the web. The only problem?

Yet I wouldn’t trade that for the real Outlook for anything. Why? Well, the real Outlook works offline. The real one is far easier to manipulate. The real one looks better. The real one doesn’t go away if I accidentally hit refresh (or, worse, walk out of network range).

This is a common complaint people have about web-based apps. It’s one of the reasons I refuse to use webmail entirely. 90% of the time, I have my laptop with me. Probably only 80% of that time do I have a network connection available. That other 20% of the time, I’ve got my laptop, but if I were using webmail, I wouldn’t have anything to do with it. If our internet connection were down at work, and I needed to get that list of IP ranges I got from my ISP in an email last week, I’d have to run 2 miles down the road to Starbucks, just to snag it into Notepad and run back to enter 12 characters. If I were using Outlook, I could rev it up in offline mode and check out that previously downloaded message easily.

Since I love PHP and web design in general, this makes me wonder… So I have a question for you other web nerds out there. Isn’t there a way we could accomplish this in a thin client interface?

Most Ajax-based thin clients I’ve used have specifically killed all caching of their pages (through meta tags, etc.) to ensure that clients always get the latest data when they click on a javascript-powered link. Couldn’t we do the opposite and harness this caching support in browsers to ensure that emails would be available for a specified period of time after the internet connection was severed?

I’ve never tried this of course, and really can’t think of an easy method for testing it, but theoretically, shouldn’t this be possible? I mean, that’s part of the point behind cached pages, right? There’s got to be a way to accomplish this, even if it’s through some ikky ActiveX control that only works in IE (which would suit Microsoft just fine for OWA)…

Anyone out there reading my blog have more experience with the caching support in modern browsers? Aside from forcing browsers not to cache a page here or there, I’ve never done much with it, so this is all really theoretical…

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7:10 pm
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