derek | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 04 2008 | firefox, developer, extensions, dom inspector
derek | Shared With: Everyone - 4 days ago | browser, google, firefox
derek | Shared With: Everyone - 10 days ago | firefox, video, innovation, cool, ubiquity, microformats
derek | Shared With: Everyone - May 14 2008 | css, firefox, performance
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 07 2008 | ie, javascript, ajax, firefox, ie8, firebug
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 04 2008 | javascript, firefox, ie, performance, trimEvaluating trim functions for performance ... this really should be a standard library function.
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 07 2007 | google, gmail, hacking, greasemonkey, firefox
Semi-official greasemonkey API for Gmail, sweet. Gmail Macros is already updated to use it.
Quoted: Greasemonkey is an integral part of the web experience for many experienced users. Google acknowledges that some people are going to change their own experience of our web applications regardless of what we do. Resistance, as they say, is futile. It would also be somewhat hypocritical. After all, a Google employee wrote Greasemonkey in the first place, another wrote these scripts to add functionality to Gmail, and a third wrote two books on the subject (and these docs).
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 18 2007 | emacs, firefox, extensionsQuoted: Conkeror is a mozilla based web browser designed to be completely keyboard driven, no compromises. It also strives to behave as much like Emacs as possible. This means all the keybindings and to-die-for features of Emacs that can be imitated by a javascript/XUL web browser Just Work.
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 06 2007 | firefox, iceweasel, debian, google, lame
derek | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 08 2007 | firefox, extensions, macros, coolLooks pretty cool.
Quoted: Firefox only: Record and replay your web activities with iMacros, a free Firefox extension.






- Tosh - Feb 04 2008
- derek - Feb 05 2008
You must be Derek's friend before you can comment on this Fave.That is pretty handy. In Firebug, there is an Inspect Element context menu item, but it launches it's own DOM explorer pane. Occasionally I use this, but I don't like having another place to look at the DOM. InspectThis should work well for me. Thanks.
Yeah, I find the Firebug thing pretty lacking. Mostly use it for its sweet remote request console log.
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