Mike Torres has a blog post entitled Web 2.0 Revelation #3: I dig Firefox Extensions where he writes
But having returned to Firefox (on my
Mac and casually on my PC), I'm seriously impressed by just how much Firefox
Extensions have enabled me to do. And as much as I really love using IE7 on my
PC, having things like the SessionSaver, Answers, LiveLines, and del.iciou.us
extensions are going a long way towards swaying me over to Firefox again (note:
I haven't used Firefox exclusively on my PC since it was called Firebird a few
years ago!)
The list of extensions I'm exploring on the PC:
- Browster to make searching and
browsing just a little bit faster - slick! (works in IE too)
- de.icio.us to make
sure I update my linkblog regularly
- Answers just
because it's cool
- Tab X because I need
close buttons on tabs
- Livelines to map the RSS
feed icon to "Subscribe in Bloglines"
- SessionSaver to keep
me from losing my place
- Luna (theme) to make
it look like it belongs on Windows again - although I want a better looking
theme
One of the things that's immediately clear to me after a little
experimentation this week: IE7 just doesn't have enough to sway power users just
yet.
I've been preaching the Firefox religion to Mike and others at work primarily by praising the virtues of inline search and SessionSaver. The more I use Firefox with SessionSaver the more it irritates me that every Windows application doesn't have this functionality. I've definitely been inspired to add similar functionality to RSS Bandit.
Anyway, it looks like Mike didn't just tiptoe into the water but instead jumped in deeper than I have. On his recommendation I have installed Tab X and Luna which have quickly made my browsing experience even better. I may try out the de.icio.us extension if I can ever remember my password for the service. I probably should give a shout out to the Yahoo! Toolbar for Firefox as well. Firefox extensions totally r0x0r.