Tuesday, February 12, 2008

A deep look to Firefox 3 Beta 3 by Mozilla Links

Source: mozillalinks.org


Tomorrow, Mozilla will release Firefox 3 Beta 3, the eleventh milestone in the longest development time for a Firefox revision since the initial Firefox 1.0 on 2004. The eight alphas and trio of betas (so far), if anything, are a reflection of the long list of enhancements it (Firefox) and the underlying Gecko rendering engine, are bringing along.


Visual Refresh


Without a doubt the most visible change introduced in this beta are the theme updates in all platforms. On Windows XP and Vista, a large part of the planned new XP icons has been added to the main toolbar, the Options window, the Download Manager, here and there.


Reception hasn’t been warm precisely as was to be expected: just the same happened when Firefox dropped the Qute theme for Winstripe around version 0.9, again with the updates just before 1.0 and yet again when Radiant Core updated Firefox 2.0 icons to its current washed out aspect.


I haven’t been a big fan of any Firefox default theme so far and it doesn’t seem Firefox 3’s will be an exception. But we’ll see. There are still theme updates pending, as well as small icons, and Vista icons.


Firefox on Windows XP


The Options window on Windows XP with the new icons.


Firefox 3 Beta 3 Options


On the other hand, Mac OS X users seem to be more satisfied with the landing of Proto, a Safari-like theme introduced along with  Beta 2. Linux users also get a very well integrated theme that uses native icons.


Firefox 3 Beta 3 on Ubuntu


Firefox keyhole on MacOS XThe back and forward buttons have been combined in a single keyhole-shaped widget featuring a single history menu. So far just Windows XP and Vista feature it but Mac OS X and Linux versions are ready and waiting to get in. An option to split the combined icons in the customize toolbar dialog is being considered.


We can also expect a revised throbber (the connection activity indicator) coming soon.


Toolbar splitterThe Home button has been moved to the Bookmarks toolbar by default (but can be easily moved back) and the splitter that allows to resize the search and location bars when placed next to each other has become invisible.


Developers are aiming to deliver better operating system integration in Firefox 3. This will be most notorious for Mac OS X and Linux users who will now get native widgets like text boxes, menus, check boxes, icons, button order and orientation following each OS guidelines.


On Linux, Beta 3 adds native file open and print dialogs that provide image thumbnails and more printing options.


Firefox 3 Beta 3 print dialog on Ubuntu


Mac OS X users get integration with Growl, a popular centralized notification system, while Windows Vista gets native looking menus and new icons that should be added for the next beta.


Firefox 3 with native menus


The Page Information dialog has been reviewed to become more organized and informative and allows to set all site specific preference from a single location.


Page Information dialog


Places


A much announced and expected feature is Places, the integrated history and bookmarks manager interface powered by SQLite, a small open source database engine that provides much more robust querying capabilities.


With Places you are able to search your history, tags and bookmarks with a fully fledged search interface. You can select where to search (History, Bookmarks Menu, Bookmarks Toolbar, All Bookmarks or the selected folder), what to search (visited date, web address or title), combine criteria and then save the search as a Smart Bookmark that updates as your personal web grows and changes.


Places Library


The Library, Places manager, also adds backup and restore UI so it is easier to recover a damaged file or incorrectly deleted bookmark.


Tagging is a new Firefox feature tightly related with Places and some of the changes to the location bar: click on an empty star icon in the location bar to save the current page as a bookmark. Click it again and you can specify a certain folder to save the bookmark to and you can add tags which you can later use to perform searches.


Tagging


You may also notice that the Go button is gone. It only appears when you are entering some text in the location bar and you may actually need to press it.


The Location Bar


The autocomplete list that appears when you start entering letters in the location bar is no longer restricted to web addresses but also looks into bookmark and history page titles and tags which make it more comprehensive.


Suggestions are are shown in two different lines and colors for page titles and addresses, which according to studies on human cognition, makes it easier for us to focus on what we are looking for. So, if the user knows she is entering part of a web address or a page title it will be easier for her to find what she’s looking for. Highlighting the match result also helps to direct the user’s attention.


Firefox 3 location bar


I believe this feature alone is the best Firefox 3 has to offer, justifies Places large resources investment and will become a landmark in Firefox and web browsers in general development. Once you get used to it, there is no turning back.


Tabbed Browsing


On tabbed browsing, Firefox will not only warn you when closing several tabs and windows at once but will prompt if you want to save the currently open tab set: a good catch and a good way to introduce this helpful feature to new users.


Tabs now scroll smoothly, and, new in Beta 3, you can sort of duplicate tabs when you press Ctrl while dragging a tab. A similar feature allows to drag a tab to another window. It’s not actual duplication or moving though, since in both cases a new navigation occurs and the original tab history is not preserved, but still a helpful addition I hope to see perfected in the next version.


Web experience


Firefox can save site specific preferences. For example you could allow just some pages to use AJAX, set a specific spell checker language, images, etc. Firefox 3 will remember the zoom level you have applied for a certain site and will zoom automatically the next time you visit it.


Net protocols (like irc, news, webcal and mailto) and certain documents handling can be passed to web services. For example, Yahoo Mail or Gmail may become your default application for mailto: links. For this, the previous web feeds page has been extended to the Options window for all content and protocols. Beta 3 distinguishes podcasts and video podcast feeds from regular ones so you can specify a different application for each.


Options Application window


 Media feeds are displayed with a link to the media file in feed preview mode.


Media feed preview


By default, web sites can’t move or resize Firefox via JavaScript. A list of authorized web sites can be maintained through Advanced JavaScript Settings in the Content page in Options.


JavaScript move, resize exceptions


Search engines


The search engine manager lets you set and change keywords for search engines. With keywords, if you associate the w keyword with Wikipedia (now a default search engine), you could enter w hawaii in the locationbar and search Wikipedia for Hawaii.


Search plugins with Wikipedia and keywords


Downloads


One of the most requested features: downloads can be paused and resumed across sessions, limited only by the server capabilities. Also, on Windows, downloaded files are automatically passed to the installed anti-virus if present and honor Windows Vista parental controls.


As seen in previous betas, the Download Manager has received a serious face lift as an easier to track download list.


Download manager


Beta 3 adds a cool new status bar notification that provides summarized status of current downloads. You can click it to open the Download Manager.


Download status


Add-ons


The Add-ons Manager has been integrated with Mozilla Add-ons, Mozilla’s official extensions and themes repository, providing recommendations, search, rating and add-ons install without  leaving Firefox.


Together with previously added Plugins page, which allows easy plugin enabling and disabling, it makes it a powerful control panel for Firefox enhancements.


Add-ons manager integrated with Mozilla Add-on


When installing, updating, disabling or enabling back an add-on, an information bar is displayed to remind a restart is needed for changes to apply, and a restart button. Plus, just installed themes are automatically selected so Firefox uses it after the next restart.


Restart Add-ons


Among other minor tweaks: FTP and gopher listings get a better styled and functional page where the list can be sorted by name, size and date by clicking the appropriate header, and a warning is displayed when accessing advanced preferences (about:config).


about:config warning


Security


In the security front, Firefox will check visited sites with a list of known malware sites provided by stopbadware.org and served by Google for sites as a way to prevent spyware, rootkits, viruses, dialers and other kinds of malware from even being offered to you.


A rewritten password manager now unobtrusively prompts to store an entered password in the information bar and after trying a logon so you know if it is the correct one or not and avoid cluttering autocomplete lists.


Remember password infobar


Identifying  authentic sites and avoiding fake ones is now easier with the addition of the site button which provides details about the identity of the current web site. While the largest part of the web has no verified identity, financial institutions and similar usually do and it makes the site button in the location bar to change color and size so you can know with a glimpse.


Site button


As great as add-ons are they are also a liability and have proved they can become a security vector. Firefox 3 requires add-ons updates to happen over an encrypted connection (to block malicious sites purporting the update site) or the add-on developer to sign it with a digital signature so updates can be verified to be from the same source. This will prevent so called middle-man attacks where bad guys could fake the update site address to server malicious software.


Under the hood


Powered by Mozilla logoThe list of changes for Gecko is not short either and benefit not only Firefox but all “powered by Mozilla” products including Thunderbird, Flock, SeaMonkey, Joost, Miro, Songbird and more.


Since Alpha 1, Firefox 3 passes the Acid2 test, a popular test of a browser styling standard compatibility. Firefox can use color profiles embedded on pictures and images to better replicate the original environment conditions as light and focus, thanks to new color management.


Discontinuous selections of text and images are now possible for better control on what you copy or print from a web page.


A biggie: page zoom magnifies the complete page and not only text. This is a much requested feature and a must for Mozilla Mobile Firefox plans.


Web developers can mark certain web page components such as images and scripts to be available while offline. In practice you could be able to compose emails or write documents though a web service while disconnected from the Internet.


Some interesting tricks that will please JavaScript developers: the ability to load local files for local use, cross site AJAX (XMLHttpRequest), native JSON support and most notably, FUEL, a library of Firefox programming interfaces that will ease the development of new extensions and ensure better practices (such as memory management) for common Firefox tasks.


A much needed memory cycle collector is now in place and it should take care of freeing memory no longer used by modules that requested it but failed to release it properly. This will improve to optimize Firefox’s memory footprint.


Support for editable content, so a user can change portions of a web page marked by the author.


The MySpell spell-checking engine has been replaced with Hunspell which does a better job handling complex languages including Asians, Hungarian, Basque, etc.


For Gecko 1.9, Mozilla switched to open source Cairo rendering engine for better rendering performance. The change also enables easy PDF printing capabilities but it is only possible through an extension right now though.


More beautiful animated images are possible with animated PNGs (APNG): a full 16 million color palette and partial transparency will hopefully sweep GIF images in the future. While APNG was rejected as a standard PNG extension last year, Opera has announced it will support the format in future versions.


Proprietary TalkBack, the tool for reporting crashes to Mozilla included with Firefox and Thunderbird, has been replaced with open source Breakpad (formerly Airbag).


Breakpad submit dialog


Socorro, is a server crash reporting tool that will help developers track the most recurring crashes and identify stability and performance bugs. Users can see their submitted crashes entering about:crashes in the location bar.


about:crash


Beta 4


There will be a fourth beta and it is expected quite soon. Probably by Febrary’s end. Release candidates could start by mid-March and hopefully on schedule for a first quarter final release.


Not much is left for the next beta: more theme retouches in all platforms, Vista icons, plus more retouches to Places and several other areas, some of them already available in the latest nightlies that followed Beta 3 freeze.


According to the latest meeting minutes, the revamped location bar’s autocomplete font size and colors could be reviewed to address some common complaints about it being too obtrusive. Support for multi-word searches is also planned, so for example entering star and then wii, will filter out starbucks while keeping that cool Super Mario Galaxy guide in the results.


Add-ons-wise, Firefox 3 support is moving fast and as much as 40% of the top extensions are keeping up with the betas and most likely to be ready by final release. This is at least in part thanks to a very early documentation process and a continuous call for developers. We could see an easy transition for the large number of users that rely on extensions and themes for their best web experience.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Firefox tips and triks 12. How to make Firefox start faster by cybernetnews.com

Source: cybernetnews.com

Works with Windows only.

One thing that has always left me puzzled is why Firefox takes so long to startup. Both Opera and Internet Explorer take just seconds to get up and running, but on all four of my computers Firefox takes between 10 and 20 seconds to start (even with no extensions installed).

If you find yourself in a similar situation then what you might need is the open source Firefox Preloader. It can be set to startup when you turn your computer on, and with it Firefox will always be at your beck and call. If there are multiple versions of Firefox installed on your computer you can decide which one you would like it to work with.

This feature does come at a cost though. When the preloader first started up on my computer it used about 4MB of memory itself, and Firefox was using about 10MB. Those aren’t drastic numbers, but for those of you conscious about the memory usage you might want to think twice before using the preloader. Also, when you close Firefox it doesn’t actually close all the way, instead it’s just tucked away so that it will still start quickly the next time you go to use it.

Firefox tips and triks 11. How to convert Greasemonkey scripts into Firefox extensions by Download Squad.

Source: Download Squad

User Script Compiler is a tool that creates a Firefox extension from a Greasemonkey script. So why would you want to do that? The answer is simple: for the mass majority of Firefox users that fear associating anything called "Greasemonkey" with their computers, and who panic at the mention of "scripts."

Intrepid techies such as Gina Tripani of Lifehacker have worked to make Greasemonkey scripts more digestible (her Better Gmail is a selection of scripts wrapped in a simple Firefox extension). Now, with the User Script Compiler, there is a way for all users to easily convert Greasemonkey scripts into the one-click simplicity of a Firefox extension, with no programming experience required.

Converting a Greasemonkey script into a Firefox extension does take a bit of legwork--but we're confident all you Download Squad readers could do this in your sleep.

First, you'll need to track down your installed scripts. They're in your Firefox profile, under the "gm_scripts" sub-folder. Or, if you'd prefer, you can skip the search and download any script from the online script repository.

Next, you need to change the file extension from .js (Javascript) to .txt (plain text). After you've changed the extension, double-click the file to view the code. Copy and paste the code into the User Script Compiler and hit "Generate."

Voila! Your new Firefox extension (.xpi) is complete. To install in Firefox, simply drag the new extension onto the Firefox interface and follow the prompts.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Cybernetnews about Firefox 3 Beta 3

Source: cybernetnews.com

Mozilla just announced that they are planning on having the first Release Candidate build of Firefox 3 Beta 3 coming this Monday, and although no word on a release date was announced it can probably be expected about a week after that.

The new Beta will be the first release to start showing off the new Windows themes that they’ve been working on, but as it stands right now the Vista-specific theme is not available. Vista users will see the same theme as XP users, which I’ve captured in the screenshot above. I definitely don’t like how that theme looks on Vista, and I don’t think it would look all that much better on XP. As other people have iterated before the theme has a plastic-like look to it that makes it feel like a toy.

And no, the theme is not the “big new feature.” Just the other night Mozilla rolled out a new section to the Add-ons manager for finding extensions without ever going to the add-ons site:

It only shows a handful of results, and then provides a link to the add-ons site to view the remaining extensions. I’m guessing that Mozilla is doing this in hopes of getting the add-ons to gain traction with new Firefox users.

That’s about all the new stuff that users will see in Firefox 3 Beta 3 since the last Beta was released, plus a bunch of bug fixes. After Beta 3 there will be another “quick” release of Beta 4, and then they will be moving on to the Release Candidate stage. You know what that means don’t you? Mozilla might be able to pull off a release in the first quarter of 2008 like they have been anticipating.


Firefox Tools for Webmasters by web-hosting-newsletter.com

Source: web-hosting-newsletter.com

When it comes to browsers that give the webmasters a lot of control and tools to use, you can look no further than Firefox. With the right extensions and toolbars - Firefox can in fact become the web developer’s best friend.

Firebug - you can edit, debug, and monitor CSS, HTML, and JavaScript live in any web page!

Web Developer Toolbar -A Toolbar with every web dev tool you could ever need or want.

FireFTP - A FTP program built right into your Firefox browser, two birds - one stone.

FireShot - FireShot is a Firefox extension that creates screen shots of web pages.

FoxyProxy - An advanced proxy management tool that completely replaces Firefox’s proxy configuration.

IE View - Make short work out of checking your web site in both Firefox and Internet Explorer.

ColorZilla - You can get a color reading from any point in your browser, quickly adjust and paste it into another program.

Screengrab! - Screengrab saves entire web pages as an image.

HTML Validator - Use this to validate your HTML and CSS to work as the standards say they should.

YSlow -YSlow analyzes web pages and tells you why they’re slow based on Yahoo’s rules for high performance web sites.

MeasureIt - Draw out a ruler to get the pixel width and height of any element.

SeoQuake - Helps web masters who deal with search engine optimization and internet promotion of web sites.

View Source Chart - Draw a colored chart of the web page’s source code to make it easier to understand.

Save As Image - Adds the ability to save a page, frame, or part of either as an image.

CSSViewer - A simple CSS property viewer.


Tuesday, January 22, 2008

SEO tips with Firefox by World Auto Parts Data Center

Source:World Auto Parts Data Center

One example of code whatever optimizer should fuck is Firefox. Now whatever haw feature “Why Firefox, it’s exclusive a browser?” Yes, it’s a browser, but digit that supports a bounteous difference of plugins, whatever of them rattling multipurpose for wager engine optimization. So let’s wager what those plugins are:

1. SEOpen ( https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/570/ ): this is digit of the prizewinning and most utilised Firefox seo plugins, and has some tools that attain it a selection of mine. So let’s wager what it crapper do:

* in Google it crapper analyse for: backlinks, indexed pages, attendant pages, store and PageRank.
* in character and MSN: backlinks and indexed pages.
* for Alexa: overview, reciprocation details, backlinks and attendant sites.
* keyword spacing of the most utilised book on the page.
* DMOZ checker: wager if the place is included in the directory.
* analyse for robots.txt.
* validator to analyse your tender for errors (it uses the validator from www.w3.org).

There are added things, but these are the most important.

2. SEO Links
( http://www.webmasterbrain.com/seo-tools/firefox-extensions/seo-links/ ) is added spreading I ingest everyday. When the spreading si astir and you waver over a unification a tooltip module materialize that module exhibit you Yahoo, MSN, and Google unification popularity and senior accumulation for the address and fix book pair. When you’re only feeding this crapper be annoying, but you crapper only modify it with a right-click!

This could be rattling easily utilised to analyse your wager engine rankings for a destined page, and here is how: indite up a itemize with every the keywords and keyphrases that you poverty to surpass for, and then unification those book or phrases to the scheme pages related with them!

Now every instance you poverty to analyse your ranks alter the SEO Links spreading and waver over the course — you module wager where your pages are in Google, character and MSN.

3. Don’t squander anymore of your wanted concealment actual realty meet to encounter discover what your PageRank and AlexaRank is! SearchStatus (https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/321/ ) crapper set anywhere you poverty (I ready it in the position bar) and you’ll obtain the wanted content at a glance. But this lowercase agency crapper do a aggregation more than that:
* it shows what metatags a place has
* checks for backlinks and indexed pages in Google, character and MSN
* it shows the robots.txt file
* keyword spacing inform function
* and prizewinning of all: the particular “nofollow” course module exhibit you what course module be followed by wager engine spiders — rattling multipurpose when you poverty to accede your place to a directory and don’t undergo if it module concern from a seo perspective.

So in housing you’re not using Firefox, go intend it! It could be your prizewinning someone when it comes to wager engine optimization!

Firefox tips and triks 10. How to Download from Megaupload using Firefox?

Source: blogdeny.blogspot.com

Anyone can download from megaupload ..just follow these steps:

You must have mozila firefox browser to use this trick so

Step 1. Download and install mozila firefox
Step 2. Go to address bar and type: about:config
Step3. Search for general.useragent.extra.firefox
-Double click on it
-Change the default text with this: Firefox/2.0 MEGAUPLOAD 1.0

If you are using another version of firefox then replace 2.0 with your version.
You can find the versin from Help->About..
-Start Downloading witout any Toolbar

Now you have to wait just for 45 second and free download will be available.
This is so easy and within seconds u can resume ur download from Megaupload.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Firefox tips and triks 9. Tips by pcsplace.com

From pcsplace.com

Mozilla is the world’s most favourite browser. I love firefox and will suggest anyone who are not using it to switch over to it. Here are some interesting tips and tricks in firefox which will lessen your work and will enhance your browsing experience

# To quickly find any word in a web page type /word - it will highlight the word and press Ctrl+G to find that word again

# If you wish to remove an item from your Address Bar Drop down menu, highlight it without clicking and press Shift+Delete.

# Clear your Download history to make the download manager more responsive : Tools | Options | Privacy

# Type about:cache?device=disk in your address bar to view/save items that you have in your Firefox disk cache

# Type about:cache?device=memory in your address bar to view/save items that you have in your Firefox memory cache

# Drag any link to the Download Manager Window to add & download the link.

# If you accidentally delete a bookmark and want to recover it, open the “Bookmarks Manager” and use Ctrl+Z, or Edit | Undo.

# Double Clicking empty space on the Tab Bar will open a ‘New Tab’

# Holding down the Ctrl key when you right click to “View Image” or “View Background Image” will open the image in a New Tab or New Window.

# A bookmarks folder’s position can also be dragged & dropped but you must hold down the SHIFT key while Dragging.

# To prevent a website from replacing/changing your right click context menu go to Tools > Options > Web Features then click the “advanced tab” and de-select “remove or replace context menus”. Inf Firefox 2 and above go to Tools>Options> content>Advanced

# You can work offline in Firefox just go to File > Work Offline. This means that you can browse your previously visited pages even when you’re offline this is a really cool feature but not many people who use it.

# You can bookmark the current page by dragging the icon from the location bar to your Bookmarks folder. You can also drag it to the desktop to make an icon for that page.

# To stop animated gifs from moving, press the ESC key.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Firefox tips and triks 8. 10 tips to maximise your Firefox by graphicsguru

Tips by graphicsguru was fonnd in foxiewire.com

  • 1. If you've been an Internet Explorer 6 faithful, you will enjoy the tabbed browsing feature in Firefox. Instead of opening a separate window for each website you want to surf, you can organise them into a single window for less clutter.

    Use Ctrl-T to open a new tab and Ctrl-Tab to cycle through the tabs. Shift and click on a link to open it in a new tab in the background or press Shift, Ctrl and click to bring the new tab into the foreground.

  • 2. Been typing whole domain names with the 'www.' prefix and '.com' suffix into the address bar? You can save some keystrokes.

    Type just the bits in-between, for instance, enter 'yahoo', then hit Ctrl + Enter.

    The complete 'www.yahoo.com' address will be formed and loaded automatically. For www.(domain name).net, hit Shift+Enter.

  • 3. Instead of clicking on the Forward or Back buttons, hold Shift and turn the scroll wheel of your mouse forward or backward to navigate through the web pages.

  • 4. You can assign keywords to your bookmarked sites - right-click on the bookmark and click properties. You can then load the keyworded bookmark quickly by entering the keyword in the address bar.

  • 5. Back up your bookmarks by going to Bookmarks: Organise Bookmarks. Click File:Export. Give the file a name and click Save.

  • 6. To quickly change the text size on a web page, use Ctrl and the + (plus) key to make text bigger, and Ctrl and - (minus) to make text smaller. To revert to the default text size, press Ctrl and 0 (zero). You can also change the text size by pressing Ctrl and moving the scroll wheel up or down.

  • 7. The usual way to go about searching for text on a web page is via Ctrl-F, the find command. Skip to this shortcut: Under Firefox's Tools: Options, select Advanced: General, then check 'Search for text when I start typing'. Type a string of text and Firefox automatically looks for it on-the-fly.

  • 8. Configure Firefox to automatically purge your private data. Under Tools: Options, select Privacy, then check 'Always clear my private data when I close Firefox'. Just underneath this setting, you can also configure Firefox to prompt you before clearing the private data by checking 'Ask me before clearing private data'.

  • 9. If you let your browser remember passwords, make them safer by configuring a master password. Select Tools: Options, then Security. Under the Passwords section, check 'Use a master password'. Be sure to use a password that cannot be easily guessed by other people.

  • 10. You can configure Smart Keywords, which lets you search websites from the address bar. For instance, if you regularly query Amazon.com to search for books, navigate to the homepage, enter the keyword and click Go. This can be simplified.

    Go to the webpage with the search field, right-click the search field, then choose 'Add a Keyword for this Search'.

    The Add Bookmark dialog will pop up. Give the bookmark a name, for instance, 'Amazon Search', and a keyword, for example 'am' and save the bookmark.

    The next time you want to search for a book, just enter 'am (name of book)' into the address bar and hit Enter.



  • Monday, January 14, 2008

    Firefox tips and triks 7. Firefox Tips from googlesystem.blogspot.com

    Tips was found in googlesystem.blogspot.com

    1. Change the refresh for live bookmarks
    Type about:config, create a new integer value browser.bookmarks.livemark_refresh_seconds and enter the number of seconds for the update interval (default:3600).

    2. Change the way Firefox handles keywords typed in the address bar. If you don't type a URL, Firefox sends you to the first result for your query.
    Type about:config, write keyword.URL in the Filter, and change the value to
    http://www.google.com/search?ie=UTF-8&sourceid=navclient&gfns=1&q=
    If your query has a clear match (like [slashdot], [stanford]), the functionality will remain. If you enter a general query (like [pizza recipes]), you're sent to the results page.

    3. Change the source editor.
    Type about:config and edit these values.
    view_source.editor.external - open the source with an external application (default: false, change to true)
    view_source.editor.path - the path to a text editor like Notepad, Notepad2, NoteTab.

    4. Hold down Ctrl when you click on "View image" in the contextual menu to open the image in a new tab. The same trick works for bookmarks, history items, home button, links and can also be done by clicking on the middle button.

    5. Move bookmark folders by pressing Shift while using drag&drop.

    6. Delete an item from the address bar's history by selecting it with the arrow keys and pressing Shift+Delete.

    7. If Adobe Reader crashes your browser go to tools->options->downloads->view and edit actions. Select PDF, change action and choose "Save them on my computer". You can do the same with other file types (like MP3, WMA, MPG).

    8. Type / to search in the current page and Ctrl+K to search the web (bring focus to the search box).

    9. Duplicate a tab by clicking on the address bar and typing Alt+Enter.

    10. Firefox fixed a number of memory leaks in version 1.5.0.1, so make sure you have the latest stable version. Now let's optimize Firefox to use less memory and to work faster.

    Type about:config in the address bar.

    * create a new boolean entry config.trim_on_minimize and set it to true
    * set browser.cache.memory.capacity to a fixed size (the default values are: for 256 MB RAM - 14336, 512 MB RAM - 22528, 1 GB RAM - 32768). A good value to try is 16384.
    * set browser.sessionhistory.max_total_viewers to 0
    * change image.animation_mode to none

    Go to Tools/Options.

    * set the disk cache memory to a low value (less than 50 MB)
    * turn off Java
    * try to avoid these extensions: Adblock, Fasterfox, IE Tab, Session Saver. Use Adblock Plus instead of Adblock.
    * don't use more than 5 extensions

    Using these tips, I could make Firefox use 50 MB of RAM on average, from more than 100 MB of RAM before.

    If you want to fully optimize your memory, you should try FreeRAM XP Pro, a free program that recovers memory leaks.

    Friday, January 11, 2008

    Firefox tips and triks 6. Make Firefox Start-Up Faster

    Article found in beyondteck.blogspot.com

    Is it just me or does it take a while for Firefox to start-up? I'm experiencing this on windows and on mac. Both Internet Explorer and Safari seem to beat Firefox by about 2 whole seconds. I'm not sure about the solution for OS X, but I did figure out how to reduce the start up time Firefox on a Windows based computer. Actually it's pretty easy.

    All you do is download Firefox preloader, and it loads up Firefox every time you start-up or restart your computer. So Firefox is always loaded in your memory, ready to spring into action. Although, you need to keep in mind that having Firefox running in the background might deteriorate the performance of your PC as it is still a memory hog. So, I only recommend you use Firefox preloader if your computer is loaded with extra ram.

    Firefox extensions. Add-on for Tiddly Wiki.

    Add-on for Tiddly Wiki was found in moultriecreek.us

    TIDDLY WIKI TIP: If you use Tiddly Wiki and Firefox, there’s an add-on called TiddlySnip which allows you to highlight and save text - and pages - from the web as you wander. You have lots of customization flexibility adding even more value to this very useful personal wiki.

    All you do is highlight the text you want to grab, then right-click and choose the TiddlySnip Selection option from the popup menu. The next time you open your Tiddly Wiki, you’ll see it added to your Timeline in the right sidebar. Open the tiddler and you’ll see the text you highlighted along with a link to the source page. Here’s an example.


    Firefox tips and triks 5.

    Article about Firefox tweaks from cybernetnews.com

    –How To Use About:Config–

    Almost all of the tweaks use the about:config screen in order to change the options. By now I’m sure most of you are familiar with using it but in case you aren’t I’ll give you a quick run through.

    1. Start Firefox.
    2. Type about:config into the address bar and press Enter. If I tell you that the key already exists then you can type the name of the preference in the Filter box. Once you find the preference you just need to double-click on it to change the value.
    3. If I tell you that the key does not exist then you you will need to create a new value. The value may be a string, boolean, or an integer and can easily be created by right-clicking anywhere in the screen.
    4. You may need to restart your browser for some of the options to take effect. All preferences can be reset to their default value by simply right-clicking on the option in about:config and selecting Reset.

      Alright…it’s tweak time!

    –Configuring The Scrolling Tabs–

    Firefox 2 is now designed to create a scrolling tab bar when there are an abundance of tabs open. It is hard to define “abundance” because some people prefer to have really small and nearly unreadable tabs instead of having them scroll.

    • Name: browser.tabs.tabMinWidth
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 100 (pixels)
    • Possible values:
      • Value greater than 100 will initiate scrolling sooner.
      • Value less than 100 will initiate scrolling later.
      • Value of 0 disables scrolling.

    –Configuring The Red X (Close Button)–

    The placement of the Close Button has been a very controversial subject for many people. I have run into several individuals who hate that there is now a button on every tab while others say “it’s about time.” I like the feature but if you’re one of the people that don’t then you can easily change it:

    • Name: browser.tabs.closeButtons
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 1
    • Possible values:
      • 0 - display a close button on the active tab only
      • 1 - display close buttons on all tabs
      • 2 - don’t display any close buttons
      • 3 - display a single close button at the end of the tab strip (Firefox 1.x behavior)

    If you decide that you want to leave the Close Button on all of the tabs then there is another configuration option that you may be interested in. This option is considered the clipping width and refers to how small a tab can be and still display a close button. It only applies to the tabs other than the one that is currently selected.

    • Name:browser.tabs.tabClipWidth
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 140 (pixels)
    • Possible values:
      • Value greater than 140 will hide the Close Button sooner.
      • Value less than 140 will hide the Close Button later.
      • Value of 0 disables the hiding of the Close Button.

    –Change Address Bar Search To “I’m Feeling Lucky”–

    Firefox no longer uses the “I’m Feeling Lucky” search by Google. Now it uses the “Browse By Name” which is very similar. In fact, you may not even notice a difference but there definitely is.

    I put together a search box that will demonstrate the difference between the two types of searches. Just type a word in the box and press the respective button for the search type that you would like to perform:

    Basically the “Browse By Name” will only take you directly to a site if Google is sure that the first result is what you’re looking for. Otherwise it will take you to the Google Search Results page. If you type “Microsoft” into the box both searches will give you the same result but if you type “Stanford” into the box they will be different.

    If you want to keep the “Browse By Name” then you don’t have to do anything, but those of you that want to switch back to “I’m Feeling Lucky” can use this information:

    • Name: keyword.URL
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: Browse By Name (right-click and copy the URL)
    • Possible values:
      • I’m Feeling Lucky (right-click and copy the URL)
      • You can also change it to any other search strings

    –Adding Other Default Feed Readers–

    In my last article on tweaking Firefox I walked through the 11-step process to adding another feed reader to the existing list that Firefox has. There is a much easier way that Mozilla Links pointed out and it is as simple as clicking on a few things. Just click on any of the feed reader links below to add them to the list in Firefox (you’ll be prompted to confirm the addition):

    –Unresponsive Scripts–

    Sick of getting the unresponsive script error messages? In Firefox 2 a script will be given 20 seconds to execute, and anything beyond that it will display the script warning. If you are constantly getting these warnings (common on some slower computers) then you should consider increasing the duration.

    • Name: dom.max_script_run_time
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 20 (seconds)
    • Possible values:
      • Value greater than 20 will delay the unresponsive script longer.
      • Value less than 20 will delay the unresponsive script sooner.

    –Microsummary Update Interval–

    Microsummaries have the potential to become extremely useful but they need a little push. For CyberNet I came up with three different ways that I could use Microsummaries to keep users more informed of new posts and comments. If you haven’t been using the Microsummaries because they don’t update frequently enough then you can always adjust it:

    • Name: browser.bookmarks.microsummary.updateInterval
    • The preference name does not exist and needs to be created. Use an Integer type when creating the preference.
    • Default Value: N/A
    • Possible values:
      • The number of minutes between updates expressed as an integer.

    –Changing The User Agent–

    If you run into a site that says it is not compatible with your browser there may be a good chance that it’s because you are running Firefox 2. If you know it worked fine in Firefox 1.5 then you should try to change your user agent. By doing this Firefox can identify itself as a previous version, such as Firefox 1.5, which may solve the compatibility issue.

    • Name: general.useragent.extra.firefox
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: Firefox/2.0
    • Possible values:
      • Firefox 1.5
      • Firefox 1.5.0.7
      • etc…whatever identification string you would like, but the I listed should work fine.

    –Hide The Go Button–

    If you haven’t noticed that new Go button can’t be removed from the Address Bar. Well, at least not in the typical fashion of removing buttons from toolbars. There is a configuration option that can be used to remove the button though.

    • Name: browser.urlbar.hideGoButton
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: false
    • Possible values:
      • false - display the Go button
      • true - hide the Go button

    –Eliminate JavaScript Popups–

    Firefox is setup to let you customize how you want it to handle popup windows. In the Options they can be set to open like normal in a new window or they can be set to open in a tab. However, JavaScript popup windows are a slight exception but can be changed so that they are treated the same way as any other popup.

    • Name: browser.link.open_newwindow.restriction
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 2
    • Possible values:
      • 0 - Open JavaScript windows the same way as you have Firefox handle new windows. This is my recommendation because if you have Firefox set to open new windows in a new tab then it will treat JavaScript windows the same way.
      • 1 - Allow all JavaScript windows to popup if requested.
      • 2 - Open all JavaScript windows the same way as you have Firefox handle new windows unless the JavaScript call specifies how to display the window.

    –Enable Spell Checking In All Text Fields–

    The inline spell checking is probably my favorite feature in Firefox 2 but it doesn’t check the single-line text boxes for spelling mistakes. You can right-click on the field and have it check the spelling or you can permanently turn spell check on by changing a configuration option.

    • Name: layout.spellcheckDefault
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 1
    • Possible values:
      • 0 - Disable the spell checker
      • 1 - Enable the spell checker for multi-line text boxes
      • 2 - Enable the spell checker for all text boxes

    –Increase Maximum Number Of Connections–

    When you go to download multiple files you may notice that Firefox will only let you download two files at a time. If you want to download more you will have to increase the number of connections Firefox can make.

    • Name: network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: 2
    • Possible values:
      • Increase the value to something larger than 2 if you want to have the ability to download more files simultaneously.

    –Open Search Box Results In New Tab–

    The search box in the upper-right corner of Firefox makes it really easy to search your favorite sites. You can get each of those search queries to open in a new tab with this simple tweak:

    • Name: browser.search.openintab
    • The preference name already exists and does not need to be created.
    • Default Value: false
    • Possible values:
      • false - open search box results in current tab
      • true - open search box results in new tab

    –Disable Session Restore–

    The built-in session restore feature is really nice but I use Tab Mix Plus and its session restore is a little nicer (it remembers things like tabs that I have protected). It has some nice features but if you don’t disable the one that Firefox has then you may end up receiving duplicates of all your tabs.

    • Name: browser.sessionstore.enabled
    • The preference name does not exist and needs to be created. Use an Boolean type when creating the preference.
    • Default Value: true
    • Possible values:
      • false - disables the built-in session restore
      • true - enables the built-in session restore



    –Lower The Physical Memory Used When Minimized–

    This last one is a classic for our site. This article was posted back in March of 2006 and has received over 4,300 Diggs. Since that time it has brought in nearly 200,000 unique visitors and many find that it does exactly what they want.

    This tweak will send Firefox to your virtual memory when you minimize the browser, therefore freeing your physical memory for other programs to use. Firefox will reduce its physical memory usage, when minimized, to approximately 10MB (give or take some) and when you maximize Firefox it will take back the memory that it needs. Some people argue that this is not a good thing to do but other browsers, like Opera, have are setup to do this by default.

    • Name: config.trim_on_minimize
    • The preference name does not exist and needs to be created. Use an Boolean type when creating the preference.
    • Default Value: N/A
    • Possible values:
      • true - this enables Firefox to be written to the virtual memory when minimized.


    Wednesday, January 9, 2008

    Sexy Firefox Wallpapers





    No comments. Found here (you can see there more)

    Monday, January 7, 2008

    Firefox tips and triks 4. 10 Tips for Navigating More Efficiently in Firefox by graphicsguru

    Tips by graphicsguru was found in foxiewire.com

    If you use Firefox all day, as I do, you may have mastered a few of the navigational tools it offers, but there are a lot of them under the hood. You can be faster and more efficient with the browser if you learn some easy ways to use your mouse and keyboard to navigate. In this post, I’ll round up 10 tips for more efficient surfing. Quite a few of these will work in other browsers as well.

    Open a Link in New Tab. Firefox lets you open any link you see at a site in a new tab if you right click on the link and select Open Link in New Tab. If you have a scroll wheel on your mouse, it’s even faster to do this by clicking once on the scroll wheel while hovering over the link. If you don’t have a scroll wheel, you can hold down the Ctrl key and click your mouse to open a link in a new tab (or Command-click if you’re using a Mac).

    Close a Tab with the Scroll Wheel. If your mouse has a scroll wheel click on any open tab with it to close the tab.


    Open a Link in a New Window. To open a link in a whole new instance of Firefox, right click on the link and select Open Link in New Window. You can also hit Shift-click to open a link in a new window.



    Increase/Decrease Text Size on any Page. You can increase the size of text you are reading on a given page by holding down the Ctrl key and using the mouse scroll wheel to scroll down. Hold down Ctrl and use the scroll wheel to scroll up to decrease text size.

    Scroll Slowly, One Line at a Time. To scroll up or down a page of text one line at a time, hold down the Alt key and move your scroll wheel.

    Flip Pages with the Scroll Wheel. To avoid using the navigation arrows atop Firefox to flip pages, hold down the Shift key and move your scroll wheel down to go back a page, and up to go forward a page.

    Quickly Select a Whole Line of Text. Within any word your mouse cursor is in, click your left mouse button three times rapidly to select the whole line.

    Scroll Without a Scroll Wheel. If your mouse has no scroll wheel, hold the Tab key on your keyboard down until the page you’re on starts to rapidly scroll.

    Scroll with Gestures. If your mouse does have a scroll wheel, click once within a body of text, and your cursor should change its form factor. Now just move the mouse up or down to scroll.

    Use Navigational Extensions. There are several good, free extensions you can download to make navigating in Firefox easier and more flexible. Super DragandGo is a good one for dragging anything on a page, such as a link, to a blank spot in the page to open it in a new tab.

    Sunday, January 6, 2008

    Firefox tips and triks 3.

    Other Tips

    View web pages in your preferred language (if available)

    Some web sites offer content in multiple languages. You can choose several languages in Firefox and they will be treated in order of priority. In order to change the priority, just go to Tools > Options... > Advanced, select the General tab, and under Languages, click the Choose... button.

    Run Firefox from removable media

    This advanced tip makes it possible to run Firefox from removable media, such as a USB memory stick. This will allow you to run Firefox with your personal settings from any computer, even those that don't have Firefox installed. It has only been tested on Windows XP/2000. The basic instructions are as follows:

    1. Copy the Firefox application folder and your profile folder to the removable medium. In this example we will use R:\Firefox for the application folder and R:\FFProfile as the profile folder, assuming the drive letter for the removable media is R:.
    2. Create a simple batch file called R:\Firefox.bat with the following line:
      start \Firefox\firefox.exe -profile \FFProfile
    3. Optionally, disable the disk cache to reduce the amounts of file writes to the removable storage by using about:config to set browser.cache.disk.enable to false.

    The reason why a batch file is needed instead of a simple shortcut is that a shortcut uses absolute paths, and since the actual drive letter for the removable media may change depending on which computer it is plugged into, the relative path used in the batch file is guaranteed to work anywhere.

    Select and copy individual table cells

    While holding down the Ctrl key, you can select table cells. Just click on any non-link portion of the cell. You can select multiple cells, either by clicking individually on the cells you want to select or by just dragging with the mouse. Once selected, you can use Copy and Paste just like you would on a text selection.

    Speed up page rendering

    By default, Firefox doesn't try to render a web page for 250 milliseconds while it's waiting for data. If you use about:config to add the Integer preference nglayout.initialpaint.delay, and set the value to 0, Firefox immediately starts to display the page, even without complete data. The drawback, especially on slower machines, is that the total time to display the page will be longer.

    Enable Pipelining

    Pipelining is an experimental feature, designed to improve page-load performance, that is unfortunately not well supported by some web servers and proxies. To try it out, by using about:config to set the following preferences:

    network.http.pipelining
    Set this to true, to enable pipelining.
    network.http.proxy.pipelining
    Set this to true, to enable pipelining to the proxy server.
    network.http.pipelining.maxrequests
    Set this to 8, to have a maximum of 8 pipelining requests at once. Possible values are from 1 to 8.

    For more information about pipelining, read the HTTP/1.1 Pipelining FAQ.

    Specify where to store the cache

    To specify in which folder the cache is stored, use about:config to add the String preference browser.cache.disk.parent_directory, and set the value to C:\Path To Cache.

    Replace Path To Cache with the actual path to your cache folder.

    Specify the memory cache usage

    Normally, Firefox determines the memory cache usage dynamically based on the amount of available memory. To specify a specific amount of memory cache, use about:config to add the Intefer preference browser.cache.memory.capacity, and set the value:

    -1
    (default) Determine the amount of memory cache dynamically.
    0
    None.
    n
    Memory capacity in kilobytes. For example: 4096.

    To disable the memory cache completely, use about:config to set the preference browser.cache.memory.enable to false.

    View page source using an external program

    If you want to view the HTML source of a web page using an external text editor instead of the built-in source viewer in Firefox, use about:config to set view_source.editor.external to true, and then set view_source.editor.path to e.g. C:\Windows\Notepad.exe or whatever is your preferred text editor.

    Saturday, January 5, 2008

    Speed Up Firefox

    Usefull tips to speed up Firefox.
    Really works!

    Firefox tips and triks 2.

    Browser Behavior

    Open external links in new windows or the current tab

    The New pages should be opened in: setting in Tools > Options... > Tabs applies to links both from the current page and links triggered from other programs. If you want all links from other programs to be opened differently from links in the current page, you can use about:config to edit the preference browser.link.open_external. The values are:

    1
    Open links from other programs in the current tab
    2
    Open links from other programs in new windows
    3
    (Default) Open links from other programs in new tabs in an existing window
    Decide which New Windows to Block

    By default, all windows that a web page wants to open will be diverted to either the current tab/window or a new tab. However, this does not apply to small pop-up windows (e.g. a poll results window or the ICQ window in go.icq.com). To change this behavior so it does divert new windows that are spawned by JavaScript, use about:config to edit the preference browser.link.open_newwindow.restriction. Values:

    0
    Divert all new windows to current tab/window or new tab
    1
    Don't divert any windows spawned by JS
    2
    (Default) Don't divert JS windows that include size/placement/toolbar info
    Tweak Find As You Type

    Find As You Type has a few hidden preferences that can be changed to better fit your needs. Use about:config to change any of the following:

    accessibility.typeaheadfind.linksonly
    Set this pref to false if you want Find As You Type to search normal text too.
    accessibility.typeaheadfind.startlinksonly
    Set this pref to true if you require that the link starts with the entered text.
    accessibility.typeaheadfind.timeout
    This is the time in milliseconds for the Find As You Type to stop watching for keystrokes.
    Disable Other JavaScript Window Features

    Firefox has a few options that allow you to decide what scripts can and can not do with windows. These options are available by going to Tools > Options... > Content, and beside "Enable JavaScript", clicking on Advanced. However, this list of options doesn't cover them all. There are some other useful options which can be applied by using about:config to change the following:

    dom.disable_window_open_feature.resizable
    Set this to true to make sure all pop-up windows are resizable.
    dom.disable_window_open_feature.minimizable
    Set this to true to make sure all pop-up windows are minimizable.
    dom.disable_window_open_feature.menubar
    Set this to true to always display the menu in pop-up windows.
    dom.disable_window_open_feature.location
    Set this to true to always display the Navigation Toolbar in pop-up windows.
    dom.disable_window_open_feature.scrollbars
    Set this to true to prevent sites from disabling scrollbars.
    Use your Netscape 6/7 or Mozilla bookmarks in Firefox

    If you are using Netscape 6/7 or Mozilla, you can share your bookmarks with Firefox. All bookmarks are stored in a file called bookmarks.html and is stored in the profile folder. For example, if you want to use the bookmarks for Netscape 7 in Firefox, use about:config to add the String preference browser.bookmarks.file, and set the value to C:\Path To Netscape Profile\bookmarks.html.

    Replace Path To Netscape Profile with the actual path to your Netscape profile.

    This tip can also be used on dual-boot systems to use the same bookmarks on both operating systems. Just make sure that you place the file on a location that you have write access to from operating systems.

    By default, if you enter a search term in the address field and press Enter, a Google "I'm Feeling Lucky" search is performed, and you're taken to the first result of that search directly. If you prefer to see the standard search result list instead, use about:config to change the value of the preference keyword.URL to http://www.google.com/search?btnG=Google+Search&q=.

    Of course, you could also change to a completely different search engine by changing the string to something else. The default search string is: "http://www.google.com/search?btnI=I%27m+Feeling+Lucky&q=".

    Disable Bookmark Icons

    You can disable the display of bookmark icons and "favicons" by using about:config to set both of the preferences browser.chrome.site_icons and browser.chrome.favicons to false.

    Prevent sites from disabling the context menu

    Some sites prevent you from right-clicking on the page to show the context menu. To disable such attempts, go to Tools > Options... (Firefox > Preferences... on Mac OS X, and Edit > Preferences... on Linux), click the Content section, and then click the Advanced... button next to Enable JavaScript. In the Advanced JavaScript Settings window, uncheck Disable or replace context menus and click OK.

    Information from mozilla.org

    Friday, January 4, 2008

    200+ useful firefox extensions

    This article about firefox extensions was found in econsultant.com. I don`t think you really need to use all of them, but you can choose extensions you like ;)

    Advertising : I want to ...

    1. block ads on webpages : Adblock
    2. block ads on webpages : Adblock Plus
    3. automatically update adblocker filters : Adblock Filterset.G Updater
    4. block Flash ads/content : Flashblock
    5. Back to Top of the Page
    6. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Archive/History : I want to ...

    1. create a log of browsing history : Slogger
    2. see sites visited today/yesterday/2 days ago/etc : History Menu
    3. see thumbnails of pages in session history : Reveal
    4. Back to Top of the Page
    5. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Blogging : I want to ...

    1. blog about the current page : Performancing for Firefox
    2. blog to Blogger service : BlogThis
    3. blog to LiveJournal/etc : Deepest Sender
    4. comment about the blog page : coComment
    5. know when blog content is under Creative Commons license : mozCC
    6. Back to Top of the Page
    7. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Bookmarking : I want to ...

    1. add a bookmark-here link in the bookmarks tree : Add Bookmark Here
    2. bookmark at del.icio.us : Bookmark with Del.icio.us
    3. bookmark at furl.net : Furl Tools
    4. bypass/customize the add-bookmark dialog : OpenBook
    5. edit bookmarks easily : Flat Bookmark Editing
    6. search the bookmarks : Locate in Bookmark Folders
    7. store and sync bookmarks online : Chipmark
    8. store and sync bookmarks online : Foxmarks Bookmark Synchronizer
    9. sync del.icio.us and Firefox bookmarks : Foxylicious
    10. sync Firefox bookmarks on different computers : Bookmarks Synchronizer
    11. Back to Top of the Page
    12. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Chat : I want to ...

    1. chat on the Internet Relay Chat (IRC) : ChatZilla
    2. Back to Top of the Page
    3. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Clips/Notes/Scrapbook : I want to ...

    1. save a webpage : ScrapBook
    2. save clips from web pages : Clipmarks
    3. write a note about a webpage : QuickNote
    4. Back to Top of the Page
    5. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Customizing/Editing Website Display : I want to ...

    1. add/remove/change some features for sites : Aardvark
    2. add/remove/change some features for sites : GreaseMonkey
    3. customize a page and save as GreaseMonkey script : platypus
    4. manage user styles for sites : Stylish
    5. Back to Top of the Page
    6. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Discover : I want to ...

    1. discover new sites being recommended by others : StumbleUpon
    2. see useful sites for pages geographically marked with ICBM/geo.position tags : GeoURL
    3. Back to Top of the Page
    4. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Downloading/Files/FTP : I want to ...

    1. automatically save downloads to different directories : Download Sort
    2. download all the links on a page (filter by type) : DownThemAll!
    3. download/upload files using ftp : FireFTP
    4. manage file downloads : FlashGot
    5. open the download manager in another tab : Download Manager Tweak
    6. see download speed in a statusbar : Download Statusbar
    7. stop opening blank windows for downloads : Disable Targets For Downloads
    8. Back to Top of the Page
    9. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Email/Gmail/Webmail : I want to ...

    1. be notified when new mail arrives at Gmail account : Gmail Notifier
    2. email the entire webpage : Amazing webpage emailer
    3. insert custom signature into emails : Signature
    4. insert smiley icons in messages : Smiley Xtra
    5. manage multiple Gmail accounts : Gmail Manager
    6. treat plain text email address as link : text/plain
    7. use different Gmail accounts in different tabs : CookiePie
    8. use disposable email addresses : Create disposable email addresses
    9. use Gmail for space : Gmail Space
    10. use Yahoo Mail with AJAX support : AJAX Yahoo! Mail
    11. use webmail when mailto: link is clicked : WebMailCompose
    12. Back to Top of the Page
    13. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Financial/Stocks : I want to ...

    1. see prices in different currencies : ViewMyCurrency
    2. see stock prices in a ticker : StockTicker
    3. Back to Top of the Page
    4. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Google : I want to ...

    1. add more links to Google search; remove ads : CustomizeGoogle
    2. display my Adsense earnings : Adsense Notifier
    3. enhance Google search results with more links : CustomizeGoogle
    4. search Google and use other Google services : Google Toolbar for Firefox
    5. view an unavailable page via Google archive : Cacheout!
    6. Back to Top of the Page
    7. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Internet Explorer/Other Browsers : I want to ...

    1. view an Internet-Explorer-only webpage in Firefox : IE Tab
    2. view the same page in Firefox when it is open in Internet Explorer : FirefoxView
    3. Back to Top of the Page
    4. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Images/Graphics/Maps/Video : I want to ...

    1. click on Google images thumbnail to get full image : Google Images Re-Linker
    2. map an address; get directions : Map+
    3. save background/un-save-able images on various sites : Backgroundimage Saver
    4. save all the images/media on a page : Magpie
    5. show ALT attribute in a popup bubble : Popup ALT Attribute
    6. zoom in/out on an image : Image Zoom
    7. save video of a URL in clipboard : Clipboard-Save-As
    8. Back to Top of the Page
    9. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Links : I want to ...

    1. copy the anchor text of a link : Copy Link Name
    2. copy the anchor text of a link : Copy Link Text(CoLT)
    3. drag a link or picture and open it in a new tab : SuperDrag&Go
    4. double click on plain text url to open it : Text Link
    5. download/open all/selected links on a page : Linky
    6. number the links and use the keyboard to navigate : numberedlinks
    7. see small icons to show different link types (secured, pdf etc) : TargetAlert
    8. select and open multiple links in one action : openselectedlinks
    9. treat a plain text url as a link : Fetch Text URL
    10. treat a plain text url as a link : Linkification
    11. wrap long links that require side scroll : MR Tech Link Wrapper
    12. Back to Top of the Page
    13. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Managing Extensions : I want to ...

    1. backup instaled extensions : Firefox Extension Backup Extension
    2. edit extensions options from Tools menu : Options Menu
    3. install and manage extensions locally : MR Tech Local Install
    4. list installed extensions and themes : InfoLister
    5. list installed extensions and themes : ListZilla
    6. restart Firefox with one click : Restart Firefox
    7. see updates available for extensions : Update Notifier
    8. sort the extensions list : Slim Extension List
    9. Back to Top of the Page
    10. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Mouse : I want to ...

    1. use mouse gestures (auto/history/tab scrollers etc) : All-in-One Gestures
    2. Back to Top of the Page
    3. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Music : I want to ...

    1. control iTunes using Firefox : FoxyTunes
    2. launch windows media player for embedded video : MediaPlayerConnectivity
    3. Back to Top of the Page
    4. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    PDF : I want to ...

    1. open PDF files in a new tab : PDF Download
    2. Back to Top of the Page
    3. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Passwords : I want to ...

    1. bypass mandatory registration of username and password for sites : BugMeNot
    2. create new different passwords for different sites : PasswordMaker
    3. remember my username and passwords on sites : Always Remember Password
    4. Back to Top of the Page
    5. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Performance/Speed/Tuning : I want to ...

    1. edit userChrome.css/userContent.css/user.js : chromEdit
    2. edit/delete/move the menu items : Menu Editor
    3. minimize Firefox to system tray : MinimizeToTray
    4. see page loading progress bar : Fission
    5. see page loading statistics in a statusbar : Extended Statusbar
    6. make the stop and reload button act as one button : Stop-or-Reload Button
    7. speed up Firefox : Fasterfox
    8. use colorful menu icons : CuteMenus - Crystal SVG
    9. use colorful menu icons : CuteMenus2
    10. Back to Top of the Page
    11. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Print : I want to ...

    1. remove unwanted text/image block before printing a page : Nuke Anything Enhanced
    2. Back to Top of the Page
    3. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Privacy : I want to ...

    1. add/edit cookies : Add N Edit Cookies
    2. block phishing sites : NetcraftToolbar
    3. clear everything after the browsing session : X (Paranoia) Mod 0.6.5
    4. clear the cache with one click on the toolbar : Clear Cache Button
    5. see where form information is being submitted : FormFox
    6. surf the web without leaving a trace in my computer : Stealther
    7. use multiple proxy sites to surf the web : SwitchProxy Tool
    8. use multiple proxy sites to surf the web : xyzproxy
    9. Back to Top of the Page
    10. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Productivity : I want to ...

    1. add a powerful multi-functional preference bar : PrefBar
    2. add bookmarks to history to make auto-complete URL : AutoMarks
    3. add more search engines to Firefox search box : Mycroft
    4. automatically reload a page every few seconds : Reload Every
    5. automatically show/close the sidebar with mouse motion : Optimoz Tweaks
    6. create a tiny url : TinyUrl Creator
    7. disable the install default countdown delay : MR Tech Disable XPI Install Delay
    8. drag a link to a text area : DragToScroll
    9. enhance search engine results with more information : BetterSearch
    10. navigate up one folder level on a site : Uppity
    11. open links/mailto with external applications : Launchy
    12. remove content from pages permanently : Remove It Permanently
    13. restore all open pages after a crash : Crash Recovery
    14. restore the browser exactly as closed last time : SessionSaver
    15. see all open tabs together on screen : Firefox Showcase
    16. see date and day in the status bar : Statusbar Clock
    17. see more search result/image entries on pages : repagination
    18. smoothly scroll up/down the page : SmoothWheel
    19. switch between multiple sidebard : All-In-One Sidebar
    20. track time spent browsing / on a project : TimeTracker
    21. use a calendar : Mozilla Calendar
    22. use a sidebar to control multiple functions : All-in-One Sidebar
    23. use keyboard to go to next page/previous page : NextPlease!
    24. use the keyboard for more functions : mozless
    25. Back to Top of the Page
    26. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    RSS/Feeds/Livemarks : I want to ...

    1. Add RSS feeds to web-based/desktop readers or reader extensions : LiveLines
    2. read RSS feeds : Sage
    3. read RSS feeds : Wizz RSS News Reader
    4. reload all LiveMarks : Reliby
    5. scroll LiveMarks feeds in a tickler : RSS Ticker
    6. see newsfeeds/blogs raw xml with styles : Feedview
    7. Back to Top of the Page
    8. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Search : I want to ...

    1. add search engines to context menu : ConQuery
    2. automatically resize the search box for longer terms : Searchbar Autosizer
    3. change the order of search engines : Search Engine Ordering
    4. choose from a list of search engines : Groowe Search Toolbar
    5. choose from a list of search engines : Hyperwords
    6. delete a search plugin : SearchPluginHacks
    7. preview thumbnails of search results in Google/Yahoo/etc : Cooliris Previews
    8. preview thumbnails of search results in Google/Yahoo/etc : GooglePreview
    9. search 1-25 custom chosen sites : Roll your Own Search for Firefox
    10. search via contextmenu thru customized bookmark keywords : SmartSearch
    11. Back to Top of the Page
    12. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Search Engine Optimization : I want to ...

    1. see Alexa information, search engine backlinks for a page : SearchStatus
    2. see Google Pagerank in statusbar : Google Pagerank Status
    3. see information about the site : About This Site
    4. see search engine link counts and ranks for the page : SEO Links
    5. see search engine backlinks, analyze links, keyword density etc : SEOpen
    6. Back to Top of the Page
    7. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Security : I want to ...

    1. allow javascript/java/plugins/etc only on trusted sites : NoScript
    2. control more javascript options : JavaScript Options
    3. see cookie information on page dialog : View Cookies
    4. manage cookies : CookieCuller
    5. Back to Top of the Page
    6. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Tabs : I want to ...

    1. add a close button on each tab : Tab X
    2. change colors for different tabs : Colorful Tabs
    3. duplicate a tab : Duplicate Tab
    4. manage tabs (add/move/etc) : Tabbrowser Preferences
    5. manage tabs (multiple links/duplicate/close same domain/etc ) : Tab Mix Plus
    6. marks some tabs as permanent : PermaTabs
    7. move to next/previous tab via keyboard : SwiftTabs
    8. toggle the tab bar via chosen key : HideTabBar
    9. use multiple tab rows : superT
    10. undo/reopen the tab I just closed : Undoclosetab
    11. Back to Top of the Page
    12. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Text (Copy/Cut/Paste/Spell/Translate) : I want to ...

    1. automatically copy the selected text to clipboard : AutoCopy
    2. copy plain text (without formatting/html) : Copy Plain Text
    3. fill web forms with name/address/email etc : Autofill
    4. fill web forms with name/address/email etc : InFormEnter
    5. find the meaning of selected word in a dictionary : DictionarySearch
    6. find the meaning of selected word in a dictionary : Dictionary Tooltip
    7. find the meaning of selected word from Google definitions : Inline Google Definitions
    8. find the selected word with search plugins : Context Search
    9. highlight a paragraph and navigate with keys : Paragrasp
    10. highlight every instance of a word/phrase on the page : Context Highlight
    11. increase/decrease/back-to-normal text size of the page : Text size toolbar
    12. paste a url and load the page in one step : Paste and Go
    13. resize text areas in forums : Resizeable Textarea
    14. see all tabs in one window : Viamatic foXpose
    15. spell check text in form fields : SpellBound
    16. translate selected text using google translation service : gTranslate
    17. write in WYSIWYG mode in a text area : Xinha Here!
    18. Back to Top of the Page
    19. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Weather : I want to ...

    1. see weather information : ForecastFox
    2. see weather information (+ radar images) : Forecastfox Enhanced
    3. Back to Top of the Page
    4. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...

    Web Development : I want to ...

    1. change user agent for certain sites : User Agent Switcher
    2. find the color code of a given pixel : ColorZilla
    3. capture screenshots : ScreenGrab!
    4. capture screenshots : Pearl Crescent Page Saver
    5. check the validity of links on a page : LinkChecker
    6. copy and format selected text/title/url : Copy URL+
    7. debug ajax/css/html/javascript : FireBug
    8. debug javascript : JavaScript Debugger
    9. download an entire website : SpiderZilla
    10. edit CSS stylesheet : EditCSS
    11. find whois information of the site : domainFinder
    12. inspect the DOM of HTML, XUL, and XML pages : DOM Inspector
    13. inspect the selected element with DOM Inspector : InspectThis
    14. measure pixel width with a ruler : MeasureIt
    15. modify http/https headers and post parameters : Tamper Data
    16. preview the Adsense ads that might be shown on a page : Adsense Preview
    17. run automated tests on a site : TestGen4Web
    18. see anchors on the page : Show Anchors
    19. see color contrast page information : Colour Contrast Analyser
    20. see cookie information for a page : View Cookies
    21. see current page's heading structure in a sidebar : Document Map
    22. see errors categorizxed by type : Console2
    23. see GET and POST parmeters of the page : UrlParams
    24. see how a page will look on mobile screen : Small Screen Rendering XPI
    25. see http headers of a page : Header Monitor
    26. see IP address of the site : ShowIP
    27. see web development references in a sidebar : DevBoi
    28. see Xpath information : XPather
    29. simulate WAP browsing by viewing WML : wmlbrowser
    30. test nightly versions of Firefox : Nightly Tester Tools
    31. validate html : HTML Validator
    32. view css styles; view html in another app; validate css/htmlWeb Developer
    33. view page html source constructs directly on the page : X-Ray
    34. view rendered source : View Source Chart
    35. view source with an externall app : ViewSourceWith
    36. write lorem ipsum content for test page : LoremIpsum Content Generator
    37. Back to Top of the Page
    38. Suggestions/Corrections : Comment in blog : wordpress : I want a Firefox Extension to ...