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An extension that allows you to save and annotate anything on the web to your own personal library Commonplace is a tool that helps you capture your thoughts across the web. Store for yourself and others, while connecting the dots seamlessly with anything you’ve previously captured. 🖌️ Whether you are on an article, research paper, YouTube video or other content, highlight any text to be able to comment any thoughts or notes to store for later. These notes will be stored into your account, under the article you just read. ❓Need help understanding certain concepts or terms in the article you are reading? Simply press the explain tool to get an understanding of the term in the context of the article - without opening more tabs. 👀 Want to see what the article is about before diving too deep? Press the Commonplace extension, and then TLDR to get a brief summary of the key points in the article! ✨Click “Add to Chrome” on this page, and pin it to your tool bar ✨Sign up or log into your account by clicking on the extension ✨Highlight any text to see the highlight, comment and explain tools pop-up, or get a TLDR by pressing on the Commonplace icon ✨When you’re done your article, your notes and highlights are waiting for you in your Commonplace dashboard
Readwise Highlighter
Save a page to Readwise Reader This is the official Reader browser extension made by and maintained by the Readwise team. You use the Reader Highlighter extension to: • Save articles to Reader – the first ever read-it-later app built for power readers. If you’ve ever used Instapaper or Pocket, Reader is like those, except it’s built for the modern era and brings all your reading into one place including: web articles, email newsletters, RSS feeds, Twitter threads, PDFs, EPUBs and more. You can get started with Reader here. • Highlight and annotate the open web. All highlights that you make using this extension will be synced with the Readwise ecosystem and, optionally, to your note-taking app of choice such as Obsidian, Notion, Roam Research, Evernote, Logseq, and more. Note: You must have an existing Readwise account to use this extension. If you are not already a subscriber, you can get a free 30-day trial with no credit card upfront. At the end of the trial, you will not be charged unless you choose to subscribe.
Topaz
Topaz is an AI-powered browser extension that filters content in real-time from social media. By default, Topaz removes low-quality content; media created just to suck your attention and waste your time. Our AI has been trained to remove brainrot and other low-value media. You can also specify any topic you like to remove, as vague or precise as you want. We are working hard every day to push updates and make it the ultimate personalised web experience!
GPTweet: Instant Twitter replies using AI
Generate tweet replies with AI. Are you tired of struggling to come up with the perfect reply on Twitter? Say goodbye to the stress and frustration with GPTweet - the AI-powered Chrome extension that helps you craft personalized replies in seconds. With GPTweet, you can choose from a variety of tones to adjust your message to any situation. Want to sound positive, negative, grateful, or something in between? GPTweet has you covered. In addition, GPTweet's keyword feature lets you effortlessly personalize your replies. Input the words you want to use, and GPTweet will incorporate them for on-point messaging. With a free trial that includes a limited number of credits, you can try GPTweet today and experience the difference it can make. After that, it's easy to upgrade to our paid plan for even more credits. Boost your Twitter engagement with GPTweet - the must-have Chrome extension for effortless, personalized replies. Try it now! ✅ Free trial ✅ Pick an AI tone for your reply ✅ Add keywords for the AI to use ✅ Instant Twitter reply generation using AI
The Mouse is Lava
Keyboard shortcuts to navigate websites with your keyboard. Don't touch that mouse. Made by Ansgar Grunseid. The Mouse is Lava (MIL) is an open source Chrome extension that adds keyboard shortcuts to navigate websites with your keyboard. The goal of the extension is to minimize the number of times you have to touch the mouse. Don't touch that mouse; it's lava. MIL includes both shortcuts that work on every website and shortcuts for specific, popular websites. Like Google. Quickstart shortcuts: ======================================================================== - [Ctrl+B] to focus the first, or next, and/or element on the page. - [Ctrl+I] to find links in the page. It's like Ctrl-F but only finds links. Then [enter] to click them. - On Google search results pages, [j]+[k] and [downArrow]+[upArrow] select the next, and previous, Google search results respectively. Then [enter] to click them. - All keyboard shortcuts are customizable in chrome://extensions/shortcuts. Universal Shortcuts That Work on Every Site ======================================================================== [Ctrl+B] - Focuses the first, or next, visible, interactable, and not-disabled element in the visible page. I.e. the first interactable element. elements aren't supported yet, but will be. The first press of Ctrl+B focuses the first input element in the visible page. Subsequent presses of Ctrl+B iteratively focus successive elements in the visible page. You can change the default Ctrl+B keybind that focuses the first input element in chrome://extensions/shortcuts. [Ctrl+I] - Opens the link search box to find clickable links in the visible page that contain your search query text. Think of the link search box like Chrome's Ctrl+F Find-in-Page tool except it only finds clickable links. Why? It's much faster to type a few characters of the link you want to click than to move your hand to the mouse, move the mouse to the link, click, and move your hand back. When the Ctrl+I link search box is open, these additional keybinds become active: Ctrl+J and Ctrl+K - Jump to the next and previous link, respectively. (VIM style keybinds) Tab and Shift+Tab - Jump to the next and previous link, respectively. Enter - Click the currently selected link. E.g. open the selected link in the same tab. Ctrl+Enter - Control+click the currently selected link. E.g. open the selected link in a new tab. link-finder.gif You can change the default Ctrl+I keybind that opens the link search box in chrome://extensions/shortcuts. [j] and [k] - Jump to the next and previous search result, respectively. (VIM style keybinds) [downArrow] and [upArrow] - Jump to the next and previous search result, respectively. [enter] - Navigate to the selected search result. [Ctrl+Enter] - Load the selected search result in a new tab. By default, the first Google search result is automatically selected on page load so you can just press [enter], or [Ctrl+Enter], to navigate to the first result. Google Navbar Shortcuts MIL adds keyboard shortcuts to navigate between the different category tabs. While on a Google.com search results page, these keyboard shortcuts become available to navigate: a - Load the All results tab. n - Load the News results tab. i - Load the Images results tab. v - Load the Videos results tab. s - Load the Shopping results tab. f - Load the Forums results tab. w - Load the Web results tab. m - Load the Maps results tab. b - Load the Books results tab. l - Load the Flights results tab. Improvements ======================================================================== Do you have an idea for a useful keyboard shortcut not yet included in MIL? Please open an issue or a PR on the GitHub repo at https://github.com/gruns/the-mouse-is-lava! 🙌 PRs always welcome.