Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Userscripts are often referred to as Greasemonkey scripts, named after the original userscript manager for Firefox. On Wikipedia, a user scripts feature is enabled for registered users that allows them to install userscripts to augment editing and viewing of the encyclopedia's pages. [4]
uBlock Origin ( ) is a free and open-source browser extension for content filtering, including ad blocking. The extension is available for Firefox and Chromium-based browsers (such as Chrome, Edge, Brave, and Opera).
Sleipnir 4 for Mac: Thumbnail Tab Navigation - open tabs are not shrunk anymore, instead they are presented in a scrollable list, with tab titles appearing on mouse hover; Portal field - a bar with a double functionality of navigation bar and search; TiledTab - view mode that gives an overview of the opened tabs and allows sorting tabs into six ...
Mac OS X; eDonkey2000 - No Yes Yes Yes No No 1 Discontinued aMule: xMule: GPL: Yes Yes [N 1] Yes Yes Yes 28 Active eMule and its Mods - GPL No Yes No Yes Yes 43 [1 ...
Developed by Steve Fernandez, a UK-based programmer, it was first released in 2009 as a Greasemonkey script, [2] as donationware. [3] It is available for Firefox, Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Safari, Opera, Brave and Maxthon. In February 2012, Fernandez was banned from Facebook, although he was allowed back two weeks later.
Greasemonkey is a userscript manager made available as a Mozilla Firefox extension. It enables users to install scripts that make on-the-fly changes to web page content after or before the page is loaded in the browser (also known as augmented browsing ).
Gears did not support attachment files with sizes greater than 2 GB under Mac OS X Leopard or Snow Leopard due to a bug in the Blob handling code. [23] [24] On May 29, 2008, Opera Software ASA announced that Opera Mobile 9.5 would support Gears. [25] The technology preview release of the browser was published on February 20, 2009. [26]
On January 6, 2019, Opera banned the Tampermonkey extension from being installed through the Chrome Web Store, claiming it had been identified as malicious. [7] Later, Bleeping Computer was able to determine that a piece of adware called Gom Player would install the Chrome Web Store version of Tampermonkey and likely utilize the extension to facilitate the injection of ads or other malicious ...