If you're a Firefox and Google Reader user and you haven't yet installed the Feedly plugin, you're going to want to install it today after you hear this: Feedly has now integrated its own results - that is, links to the relevant posts from your Google Reader - right into your Google search results. This integration essentially adds a layer of social search directly into Google, and all with no extra work on your part besides simply having installed the plugin.
TooManyTabs 0.4.1 allows you to store as many tabs as you like by adding extra rows in the Firefox! It saves your browser's space and memory as idle tabs are put aside. The extra rows also help to better prioritize and visualize your tabs.
The web has seen an explosion of chemistry and biology related resources in the last 15 years: thousands of scientific journals, databases, wikis, blogs and resources are available with a wide variety of types of information. There is a huge need to aggregate and organise this information. However, the sheer number of resources makes it unrealistic to link them all in a centralised manner. Instead, search engines to find information in those resources flourish, and formal languages like Resource Description Framework and Web Ontology Language are increasingly used to allow linking of resources. A recent development is the use of userscripts to change the appearance of web pages, by on-the-fly modification of the web content. This opens possibilities to aggregate information and computational results from different web resources into the web page of one of those resources.
The Ubiquity Herd, or simply the herd, is a word used to describe the collection of people who use Ubiquity and are willing to share some information about the commands they use by contributing to an anonymized public asset. This asset isn't just useful for discovering new commands; in the future, it will also be useful for evaluating and diagnosing the health of the entire Ubiquity software ecosystem. It's heavily inspired by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society's work on Herdict, and is one attempt to explore the complex issue of associated data as outlined by Mitchell Baker.
Bookmarklets are free tools to help with repetitive or otherwise impossible tasks in your web browser. To use a bookmarklet from this site on another web page:
More Information Google Gears (BETA) is an open source browser extension that enables web applications to provide offline functionality using the following JavaScript APIs:
Mozilla Labs is launching a series of experiments to bridge the divide in the user experience between web applications and desktop apps and to explore new usability models as the line between traditional desktop and new web applications continues to blur.
CoScripter provides an add-on for the Mozilla Firefox browser that lets you play back CoScripts automatically. After you install the CoScripter extension, every script you view on this website will have an "Open in sidebar" button: Open-in-sidebar