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Project Naptha is a browser extension software for Google Chrome that allows users to highlight, copy, edit and translate text from within images. [1] It was created by developer Kevin Kwok, [2] and released in April 2014 as a Chrome add-on. This software was first made available only on Google Chrome, downloadable from the Chrome Web Store.
After a user marks the text in an image, Copyfish extracts it from a website, video or PDF document. [3] [4] Copyfish was first published in October 2015. [5] [6] Copyfish is not only used in Western countries but despite being available only with an English user interface, is used by many Chinese and Hindi-speaking Chrome users.
On most systems only one clipboard location exists, hence another cut or copy operation overwrites the previously stored information. Many UNIX text-editors provide multiple clipboard entries, as do some Macintosh programs such as Clipboard Master, [6] and Windows clipboard-manager programs such as the one in Microsoft Office.
Other developers created more user-friendly tools beyond chromeos-apk to simplify packaging applications for the ARCon runtime. The first of them is a Chrome Packaged App called twerk [16] and the other is an Android application ARCon Packager [17] It used to be named Chrome APK Packager but the name was changed at Google's request.
Chrome Web Store was publicly unveiled in December 2010, [2] and was opened on February 11, 2011, with the release of Google Chrome 9.0. [3] A year later it was redesigned to "catalyze a big increase in traffic, across downloads, users, and total number of apps". [4]
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I added the void operator to JS before Netscape 2 shipped to make it easy to discard any non-undefined value in a javascript: URL. — Brendan Eich, in an email to Simon Willison [ 4 ] The increased implementation of Content Security Policy (CSP) in websites has caused problems with bookmarklet execution and usage (2013-2015), [ 5 ] with some ...
Greenshot is a free and open-source screenshot program for Microsoft Windows. It is developed by Thomas Braun, Jens Klingen and Robin Krom [1] and is published under GNU General Public License, hosted by GitHub. Greenshot is also available for macOS, but as proprietary software [2] through the App Store.