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This extension allows the user to see the unicode fonts in Kannada even if their system does not support it. This extension allows the user to see the unicode fonts in Kannada even if their system does not support it. -Kannada script fallback fonts installs Kannada font (Lohit-Kannada.ttf / woff under SIL OFL 1.1 license) that enables proper rendering of Kannada script on all sites (Facebook, Twitter, Google, etc.), even if their system does not support it.
Hindi Font Pack
This extension allows the user to see the unicode fonts in Kannada even if their system does not support it. This extension allows the user to see the Devanagari fonts in webpage even if their system does not have required fonts. Generally unsupported fonts are seen as square boxes, but with this extension proper font rendering in Hindi is seen after refresh. -Devanagari script fallback fonts installs Devanagari font (Lohit-Devanagari.ttf / woff under SIL OFL 1.1 license) that enables proper rendering of Devanagari script on all sites (Facebook, Twitter, Google, etc.), even if their system does not have that fonts installed.
Latinify: Indic & Arabic Romanizer
Transliterates Indic scripts (using ITRANS conventions) and Arabic script to the Latin alphabet Can you speak Hindi but struggle to read Devanagari? Understand Tamil but not the script? Follow Urdu conversations but can't read Arabic letters? Latinify automatically converts Arabic, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Odia, Pashto, Persian, Punjabi, Sinhala, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu, and more to familiar Latin letters — on any website, instantly, without sending your data anywhere. Works on news sites, Wikipedia, YouTube closed captions, social media, and anywhere else text appears in the browser. • All transliteration is done locally. Fast. • Three romanization schemes: ITRANS, ISO (15919 for Indic, 233 for Arabic), and IPA. • For Arabic-script languages, unvowelled text (no harakat) will have short vowels missing, as they are not written. This is expected. • On right-to-left pages, the page layout can optionally be flipped to left-to-right. This is best-effort and some elements may remain RTL. • At the expense of one-to-one correspondence (strict ITRANS), we prefer common conventions. • Avoids replacements like ǝ , ɔ , ~, .N, RRi, etc., making the transliterated text easier for a lay reader. • Schwa is denoted as ₐ in Devanagari and Gujarati, making it easier to ignore. • Schwa is denoted as 'a' in Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Telugu, as it is usually pronounced. • In Bengali, the inherent vowel is ɔ, not ə. It is denoted as ₒ. • Long vowels are denoted with uppercase: Examples: rAma (राम, ರಾಮ), sItA (सीता, ಸೀತಾ), Enu/En (ಏನು, ஏன்), ODu (ಓಡು, ஓடு). • Nasal signs are denoted as ⁿ or ᵐ, depending on the script and the letter. • For Indic scripts, follows ISO 15919. The inherent vowel in consonants is written as plain `a` (e.g., `ka`), as the standard prescribes — contrast with `kₐ` in ITRANS and `kᵃ` in IPA. • For Arabic-script languages, follows ISO 233 and its extensions. • Aims for phonetic accuracy rather than lay readability. • The inherent vowel uses a modifier symbol rather than a full IPA vowel when it is frequently dropped and its elision is unpredictable: `ᵃ` (modifier a) for Devanagari, Gujarati, and Gurmukhi; `ᵓ` (modifier open-o) for /ɔ/ in Bengali. • When the inherent vowel is consistently pronounced, the full symbol is used: `ɔ` for Odia, `a` for Sinhala, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam. • Short i, u, and the inherent schwa are written as `i`, `u`, and `a`, not `ɪ`, `ʊ`, and `ə`. Vowel quality distinctions (centralized/lowered vs close, mid-central vs open) are language-dependent and inconsistently applied even in academic sources; length (`iː`, `uː`, `aː`) is what matters cross-linguistically. • This extension does not detect the language. Doing so would require capabilities beyond a lightweight extension. • Schwa deletion for Bengali, Hindi and Marathi is left as an exercise to the reader. Sanskrit, often written in Devanagari, retains the schwa. For example, in Hindi, धड़कने → dhaDakne (verb) or धड़कनें → dhaDkaneⁿ (noun). Without deeper linguistic analysis, it's not possible to determine which ₐ of धड़क should be deleted. • Terminal consonants in Kannada that are not affixed with a vowel sign should ideally be transliterated to 'A', but are treated the same as non-terminal consonants. • There is no straightforward way to map anusvaras. They are sometimes pronounced as nasal vowels (आँखें), or 'n' (चिंता, ఉంది), or 'ŋ' (अंकुर, తెలంగాణ), or 'm' (संभव, దేశం), or dropped entirely (हैं in casual speech). If you'd like support for additional scripts, open an issue on GitHub. • No data is collected. • No data is sent to any remote server. • All text replacements are done locally by the extension.
Telugu Font Pack
This extension allows the user to see the unicode fonts in Telugu even if their system does not support it. This extension allows the user to see the unicode fonts in Telugu even if their system does not support it. -Telugu script fallback fonts installs Telugu font (Lohit-Telugu.ttf / woff under SIL OFL 1.1 license) that enables proper rendering of Telugu script on all sites (Facebook, Twitter, Google, etc.), even if their system does not support it.
Sauce Lens
Influencer evaluation with instant data access on Instagram As an Influencer Marketing Manager, when you're browsing through influencers on Instagram, the task of collecting comprehensive data quickly becomes a hurdle. Evaluating an influencer's reach, engagement rates, audience demographics, and past campaign performances is essential yet time-consuming. You often find yourself juggling between Instagram, various analytics platforms, and internal spreadsheet or databases to collate all the necessary information. This fragmented approach not only hampers your efficiency but may also lead to oversights and inaccuracies. The delay in obtaining crucial data could result in missed opportunities or partnerships that fail to deliver the expected ROI. The absence of a centralised platform for evaluation can cause frustration, affecting your productivity and marketing objectives. Solution: This is where the Sauce Lens extension steps in to revolutionise your workflow. Integrated with Chrome, it simplifies your influencer evaluation process right on Instagram. With Sauce Lens, you can instantly view critical influencer data like Average post engagement, Recent Accounts Mentioned alongside the Instagram interface and further enriching your browsing by providing direct links to the Sauce Influencer+ platform for a more thorough analysis. The upcoming features promise an even smoother experience, enabling you to manage Sauce collections and view deeper Influencer and Competitor Brand profile data without leaving Instagram. This optimised access to crucial data not only speeds up your decision-making process but also empowers you to make more accurate and informed decisions, paving the way for successful campaign outcomes. Powerful together: Sauce Lens is a tool designed to extend the capabilities of Sauce's Influencer+ features (Sauce account required). On its own, it's a valuable asset for quick influencer evaluation on Instagram, but when combined with the Sauce Influencer features, it becomes a powerful, efficient instrument. It grants rapid access to tracking data, collections, and robust influencer search functionalities against a database of 69 million accounts. The integration facilitates not only an enriched browsing experience but also a seamless transition to a broader spectrum of influencer management and analysis utilities available on the Sauce platform. This synergy between Sauce Lens and Influencer Plus features accelerates the data retrieval process, thereby expediting decision-making and ensuring more precise influencer partnerships for your campaigns.