iteSmart is a citation software specifically developed for PubMed users to faciliate the writing of manuscripts and other academic documents. With CiteSmart, retrieving references from PubMed is just a click away. This revolutionary software has many new features not found anywhere else. You will be able to: Search PubMed from your Word document. Insert a citation directly into your document from Internet Explorer. These two features will save an enormous amount of time. It reduces extraneous clicking and the need to create a database of references. CiteSmart handles it all!
This guide will help you understand the advantages of bookmarklets over add-ons, how to install bookmarklets followed by a list of essential bookmarklets that should work across all popular browsers including Chrome, Firefox and Safari.
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
Comprehensive Google Wave Extensions List OCTOBER 7, 2009 · 9 COMMENTS The following list is being updated at the Google Wave Developer Preview (Sandbox). Reproducing here for everyone’s reference.
"Google Chrome Converts User Scripts into Extensions A recent Chromium build added a feature that converts user scripts into extensions. Until now, Google's browser didn't provide an interface for adding and managing user scripts, so you had to manually copy the scripts to a folder. "Lots of users still complain that Chrome does not support Greasemonkey user scripts. Even though we have had the infrastructure in place to handle user scripts for some time now, it has never been clear how the feature would relate to full extensions, and so it has remained incomplete," explains Aaron Boodman, a Google Chrome developer who created the Greasemonkey extension. Now you can visit userscripts.org and any other site that links to Greasemonkey scripts and other flavors of user scripts, click on the link to a *.user.js file and install it in one click."
Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) is a free extension of MediaWiki – the wiki-system powering Wikipedia – that helps to search, organise, tag, browse, evaluate, and share the wiki's content. While traditional wikis contain only texts which computers can neithe