| I have a shitload of free and useful extensions I use often (Chrome): ORGANIZATION: - SimpleExtManager
"A simple menu to enable, disable and access options of extensions".
This allows me to have a zillion extensions and not be all active all the time. - OneTab
"Save up to 95% memory and reduce tab clutter". I use that to not have 30 tabs open when I'm researching a given subject. They're all saved as neatly organised links. It's super useful to quickly share a group of tabs (links) to a friend. - Raindrop.io
"All-in-one bookmark manager". Prettiest and most useful bookmark manager, automatically takes thumbnails, tags and meta info from a website. They also have desktop and mobile apps so all my bookmarks are super available. It's my default window when I open a new tab. - Save to Notion
"Save links to your Notion databases". For saving website pages as part of a given workflow because Notion is where I manage my work (freelance & indie projects). You can save pages in templated formats, it's really neat. Basically I use OneTab for saving, reopening and sharing groups of tabs of a given work session, I use Raindrop for saving bookmarks of my favourite websites (dev & design tools for example), and I use Save to Notion to save pages as part of a project workflow (landing page of a potential partner for a project or linkedin profile of a potential client). - 1Password
That's just my password manager. I think it works great, on all devices. ---- CONVENIENCE: - Google Translate
"View translations easily as you browse the web. By the Google Translate team." I translate stuff often, English isn't my native language. - I don't care about cookies
Auto-removes cookie banners and auto-accepts them if it's the only way to remove the banners. - uBlock Origin
"Finally, an efficient blocker. Easy on CPU and memory". I think everybody already has that haha. - Dark Reader
"Dark mode for every website. Take care of your eyes, use dark theme for night and daily browsing." So my girlfriend doesn't kill me when I open super bright tabs at 2am in bed. --- DECONSTRUCTING PRODUCTS (to learn how to build them) - Wayback Machine
"Reduce annoying 404 pages by automatically checking for an archived copy in the Wayback Machine." I love seeing how some websites evolved over time to learn about their owners' decisions. - CSS Peeper
"Extract CSS and build beautiful styleguides." Getting color HEX codes from existing websites or deconstructing how they set up their paddings, margins etc is always neat. - Wappalyzer
"Identify web technologies". I like to use it to see if something is built in no-code with a webflow CMS for example. But you really see everything someone's used to build a website. I've tried multiple tools like this one and I think this is the simplest one to understand. Builtwith has too much info to my taste. Then there's a few other extensions that I'm trying now but I'm not sure I'll keep so I won't recommend them yet. Mostly work-related for specific tools I use. |