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This content is a little crusty, having been with me through 3 separate platform changes. Formatting may be rough, and I am slightly less stupid today than when I wrote it.
04 Sep 2008

My Firefox extension collection

It seems to be some rite of passage for tech-focused blogs that they create a list of their favorite Firefox extensions. Who am I to break custom? If you’re not a web-developer, you can ignore the ones described as such, and consider the rest highly recommended. I have yet to find someone with as many extensions as me. You have been warned. Finally, you’ll find a screenshot demonstrating all these extensions in action at the bottom.


**Adblock Plus with Adblock Filterset.G Updater**

This is a fairly common standard. Adblock prevents ads from showing based on regex rules. I don’t have the time or inclination to write those rules, so I use Filterset.G to create them for me automatically. Between the two, I see no ads. Ever.

**All-in-One Sidebar**

It always drove me nuts that the download, extension, and theme panels popped up in their own window. This extension wrangles them into the sidebar area, just like the favorites. It includes an extra toolbar to toggle all the various sidebar areas, but can also contain any toolbar icon.

**Better Gmail 2**

Take Greasemonkey (which I don’t use), apply it to the Gmail interface, and you have Better Gmail 2. It adds some nice JavaScript-powered effects to the various pages, as well as additional information and links.

**BugMeNot**

I love using the BugMeNot service to circumvent those stupid sign-up requirements. I just want to read your article/download your software, get the hell out of the way! This plugin saves me from even having to visit the site. Right-click a login box, choose the BugMeNot option, and the login information is filled in automatically.

**ColorfulTabs**

Applies a different color to each tab, making each tab stand out a little bit better. Also includes options to associate the color with the content of the page.

**ColorZilla**

If you do any kind of design (but especially web design), you probably look at the web at least for some inspiration. This extension lets you grab any color displayed on any page. You can manually choose colors from the web-based palette, prepare a palette combination, and save your favorite colors.

**Console2**

Beefs up Firefox’s default error console. Search errors for specific text. Filter by JS, CSS, XML, chrome, or page content.

**CustomizeGoogle**

If Better Gmail 2 is the flash, this one is the bang. Goes deep into the top 16 Google properties and guts all the crap. Remove ads, remove sponsored links, force to secure connection (for things like Calendar and Docs).

**Download Statusbar**

Another generally popular pick. I use it for the same reason I use All-in-One Sidebar: it corrals Firefox’s bad habit of opening little extra windows. This one tucks downloads into a dynamic bar along the bottom. Each item is displayed as a progress bar, and includes a ton of download stats when moused over. After the download is done, double click to open/execute it, and the item is removed from the list automatically.

**Extended Copy Menu**

If you’re a developer, this is the must-have extension you’ve never heard of. It allows you to grab a copy of text from the browser in plain text format, i.e. without any special formatting. No more screwed up layout when you copy stuff into an e-mail or Word doc. Inversely, it also has a HTML copy option, which explicitly and cleanly grabs HTML along with the text.

**Fancy Numbered Tabs**

Replaces the closed graphic on tabs with a number. Like ColorfulTabs, I find it makes it just a little bit easier to navigate my tabs. It may bork the tab in some of the more elaborate themes.

**Fasterfox**

Another overall top pick. Fasterfox makes tweaks to Firefox’s configuration options (enter about:config into your address line to see them) to increase performance, sometimes drastically. Install, make sure it’s set to “Turbo Charged,” and you’re done. Note: Fasterfox is currently marked as “Experimental,” which means you have to have an account on the Mozilla site to download it. I can say that it has worked fine for me, your results could vary (but probably not).

**Firebug plus YSlow and Jiffy**

At this point, this one really needs no introduction or explanation. If you do anything with the web, Firebug is a must-have. It has debugging options. Lots of them. JavaScript, CSS, XML, HTML, AJAX. This post is already too long, read the documentation for all the details. YSlow and Jiffy are nice complements to Firebug’s standard functions. YSlow evaluates a given page and tells you how to speed things up. Includes links to the now-famous Exceptional Performance section of Yahoo’s Developer Network. Jiffy focuses on your Javascript and identifies which ones slowing up your page loads. Jiffy is also “Experimental,” like Fasterfox.

**FireFTP**

A solid FTP client is another required tool in any developer’s toolbox. I’ve tried all the usuals. CuteFTP, Filezilla, SmartFTP, WinSCP, each with their drawbacks. Lowsy interfaces, no reconnect, upload failure…Plus it’s another window I have to click, in addition to my browser and my coding interface. FireFTP has no downsides that I’ve found yet, sites right next to whatever site I’m working on, and is totally free.

**Forecastfox**

I don’t know anyone who doesn’t have this one. As if web-based weather wasn’t easy enough, now I don’t even need to browse anywhere to see the current, upcoming, and next day’s forecast. Mouseovers for radar and forecast details. Click any one for more information via AccuWeather.com (and with Adblock/Filterset.G, you won’t be bothered with their ads, either!). Automatic sliders for weather alerts.

**Foxmarks Bookmark Synchronizer**

Never worry about backing up your bookmarks again! Sign up for the free service (prompted automatically after installation), and Foxmarks will automatically maintain a remote copy of your bookmarks. If you’re away from your computer, you can access the bookmarks from their website. Side bonus: you can keep bookmarks in sync across multiple computers! I have an office laptop and a home desktop, and they always have the same bookmark list.

**Gmail Notifier**

There are tons of mail notifiers now, but if you use Gmail, this is one of the best. Easy setup, manage multiple accounts, automatic login, and a new mail alert slider.

**IE Tab**

Windows users have to go to the dark side for frequent security updates, and the occasional corporate site or intranet that Microsoft holds by the figs. Now you never have to leave the comforts of open-source home. This extension allows you to open a tab powered by the IE engine. Works with ActiveX plugins, so the Windows Updates site works fine.

**Old Location Bar**

I love the improvements in Firefox 3 save one: the auto-complete box that pops up as you type in the address bar. There’s so much going on in it, I find it impossible to discern the actual results at a glance. I don’t care about the page’s description, what’s the damn URL? Apparently I’m not alone. This extension brings back the simple listing behavior you saw in Firefox 2. Listed as “Experimental” like Firebug and Jiffy list above.

**PDF Download**

Ever click a link, only to get whacked in the face with that awful Adobe PDF plugin? Here’s an early warning system. When you click a PDF link, you are prompted with a series of options. Download it, open it using settings specified in the extension options, convert to HTML via PDF Download, use Firefox’s default behavior (usually aforementioned Adobe garbage), or cancel the download.

**Bonus! Foxit PDF Reader**

Okay, it’s not a Firefox extension, but I just can’t let one more person suffer under Adobe PDF Reader. That thing is a bloated, cpu-hogging, memory gobbling crap-fest. If all you need to do is view PDF documents (i.e. 99% of us), Foxit will meet your needs without running background clients (check your startup folder), and uses a fraction of the disk space.

**Quick Restart**

Ever notice that restart button you get when you install a new theme or extension? Now you can have that functionality whenever you want. Firefox still has a shifty memory leak, and this extension really saves me when it rears its ugly head. Hit the button, browser off, browser on. Tabs are saved.

**ShowIP**

Shows the IP Address of the site you are viewing in the bottom taskbar. A must for web guys, but security wonks and general tech enthusiasts will like this.

**StumbleUpon**

Ever notice your browsing habits get into a rut? You look at the same sites, or you friends keep sending similar YouTube videos of people acting like idiots. Break out! Install the plugin, create an account, set your desired topics, and click the button. SU will send you off to places previously unknown. Give your destinations a thumbs up or down, and SU will learn to tailor its offerings to you (a bit). StumbleUpon has been gaining more and more steam for its unique approach to browsing. However I saw the potential early on. Check out that “Member since” date!

**Tiny Menu**

If you’re a frequent flyer on the menu bar (File, Edit, View, etc. alogn the top), just go right past this. But if you’re a snobby tech elitist who has evolved past menus and into keyboard shortcuts, you’ll love Tiny menu. Condenses all the menu bar options under a single icon, allowing you to use the bar for other purposes, or eliminate it entirely. I stretch my address bar across the length, and give the search bar it’s own line beneath.

**Update Notifier**

Firefox does a good job of looking for updates routinely, but only does so at startup. So if you leave your browser open for long periods of time (or indefinitely, like me), you never get those notices. Enter this extension, which checks for updates at a routine interval (adjustable, 24 hours by default), and displays notifies you by highlighting the menu bar icon. The icon also allows you to run a manual check. Another click will automatically install the updates, and a third will restart the browser. All of these steps can be automated.

**User Agent Switcher**

Another must-have for web developers and designers here. It changes the user-agent string to whatever you want. In layman’s terms, you can masquerade as any other browser. Great for testign browser-specific stylesheets, as well as security settings.

**Web Developer**

Complements really well with Firebug, though there is a fair bit of overlap. I use it a lot to resize the browser for specific pixel dimensions (how does this page look at 800 x 600?), outline elements for layout debugs, reset my browser cache, find broken images, test my Javascript graceful degradation (or, often, lack thereof), or measure an elements actual size with the ruler. Plenty of other useful data outputs.


Here's what all that looks like in action. It's a bit of a departure from the default layout, but it works for me. Hopefully you'll find something useful in that list as well.

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