Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Making Chromium a Decent Browser

Google ChromeImage by Matrixizationized via Flickr
I'm getting ready to start another 30-day "The OS is Dead" trial in honor of the first look at ChromeOS (of course I'll do it with Chromium), and that means that I need to get Chromium in shape for the trip, which it's not by default. For my purposes, that means installing the following extensions:


  • Adblock+: You'll need to make sure that Chromium is fully updated for this one to work.
  • Facebook Enhancer: This extension pins the FB menu bar and side panel during scrolling.
  • Facebook Notifications: This creates a button with notifications.
  • Gmail Checker: This does the same for GMail instead of FB.
  • Google Bookmarks: This gives access to Google Bookmarks via a button.
  • Google Tasks: This creates a (hidden) task window on every page visited.
  • Jamendo Radio: This extension puts Jamendo at your fingertips. Unfortunately, it didn't work as installed and the links needed tweaking in the options.
Since I used the Zemanta Firefox plug-in for blogging, I needed to find something similar for Chrome. Zemanta's not the greatest, but it works with a feature set comparable to off-line clients. Luckily, Zemanta has a bookmarklet which causes the controls to load on supported pages. The system isn't automatic, but in my case, that's actually better since I can compose the whole post and load the components at the end, saving refreshing.

That's all I've done so far. I still need to find a video plug-in, I guess


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

1 comment:

  1. Funny, I have most of those extensions that you listed haha.

    It's true. If chrome can make a halfway decent add-on system while keeping the breakneck speed that exists in version 4.x, They'll be some serious competition for firefox on all platforms.

    ReplyDelete

Other I' Been to Ubuntu Stories

Related Posts with Thumbnails