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A push on a button will open Web page URL for full browsers (for personal computers) with a new tab. A push on a button will open Web page URL for full browsers (for personal computers) with a new tab. ------------------------------------- As internal specification, it tries to open a new tab by the following methods. (1)canonical Page (canonical) URL to which priority is given in the Web page of two or more same contents is specified. It operates, only when the sauce of a Web page has the following specification. Example: (2)Open Graph Protocol Url (OGC) Legitimate URL of the Web page is specified. It operates, only when the sauce of a Web page has the following specification. Example: (3)Twitter Card Legitimate URL of the Web page is specified. It operates, only when the sauce of a Web page has the following specification. Example: (4)mixi (mixi check) URL for PC of the mixi check is set up. It operates, only when the sauce of a Web page has the following specification. (5)URL is corrected uniquely. It is original from the present URL and corrects URL. Example:https://????.com/smart/aaa.html → https://????.com/aaa.html Example:http://m.????.com/aaa.html → http://www.????.com/aaa.html
Robots Exclusion Checker
Checks robots.txt, meta robots, x-robots-tag with URL alerts. Canonical warnings, HTTP header info. An SEO extension, robots tester. Robots Exclusion Checker is designed to visually indicate whether any robots exclusions are preventing your page from being crawled or indexed by Search Engines. ## The extension reports on 6 elements: 1. Robots.txt 2. Meta Robots tag 3. A.I. Bots 4. X-robots-tag 5. Rel=Canonical 6. UGC, Sponsored and Nofollow attribute values If a URL you are visiting is being affected by an "Allow” or “Disallow” within robots.txt, the extension will show you the specific rule within the extension, making it easy to copy or visit the live robots.txt. You will also be shown the full robots.txt with the specific rule highlighted (if applicable). Cool eh! Any Robots Meta tags that direct robots to “index", “noindex", “follow" or “nofollow" will flag the appropriate Red, Amber or Green icons. Directives that won’t affect Search Engine indexation, such as “nosnippet” or “noodp” will be shown but won’t be factored into the alerts. The extension makes it easy to view all directives, along with showing you any HTML meta robots tags in full that appear in the source code. Checks whether a website's robots.txt file blocks A.I. companies from accessing its content. It monitors 14 bots across 6 companies - OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Perplexity, Meta, and Apple, covering three types of access: training data collection, search indexing, and real-time browsing. If any bot exclusions are detected, an "AI" label will appear over the Robots Exclusion Checker icon in your browser. This feature can be deactivated within settings if preferred. Spotting any robots directives in the HTTP header has been a bit of a pain in the past but no longer with this extension. Any specific exclusions will be made very visible, as well as the full HTTP Header - with the specific exclusions highlighted too! Although the canonical tag doesn’t directly impact indexation, it can still impact how your URLs behave within SERPS (Search Engine Results Pages). If the page you are viewing is Allowed to bots but a Canonical mismatch has been detected (the current URL is different to the Canonical URL) then the extension will flag an Amber icon. Canonical information is collected on every page from within the HTML and HTTP header response. - UGC, Sponsored and Nofollow A new addition to the extension gives you the option to highlight any visible links that use a "nofollow", "ugc" or "sponsored" rel attribute value. You can control which links are highlighted and set your preferred colour for each. I’d you’d prefer this is disabled, you can switch off entirely. Within settings, you can choose one of the following user-agents to simulate what each Search Engine has access to: This tool will be useful for anyone working in Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) or digital marketing, as it gives a clear visual indication if the page is being blocked by robots.txt (many existing extensions don’t flag this). Crawl or indexation issues have a direct bearing on how well your website performs in organic results, so this extension should be part of your SEO developer toolkit for Google Chrome. An alternative to some of the common robots.txt testers available online. This extension is useful for: - Faceted navigation review and optimisation (useful to see the robot control behind complex / stacked facets) - Detecting crawl or indexation issues - General SEO review and auditing within your browser ## Avoid the need for multiple SEO Extensions Within the realm of robots and indexation, there is no better extension available. In fact, by installing Robots Exclusion Checker you will avoid having to run multiple extensions within Chrome that will slow down its functionality. 1.0.3: Various bug fixes, including better handling of URLs with encoded characters. Robots.txt expansion feature to allow the viewing of extra-long rules. Now JavaScript history.pushState() compatible. 1.0.4: Various upgrades. Canonical tag detection added (HTML and HTTP Header) with Amber icon alerts. Robots.txt is now shown in full, with the appropriate rule highlighted. X-robots-tag now highlighted within full HTTP header information. Various UX improvements, such as "Copy to Clipboard” and “View Source” links. Social share icons added. 1.0.5: Forces a background HTTP header call when the extension detects a URL change but no new HTTP header info - mainly for sites heavily dependant on JavaScript. 1.0.6: Fixed an issue with the hash part of the URL when doing a canonical check. 1.0.7: Forces a background body response call in addition to HTTP headers, to ensure a non-cached view of the URL for JavaScript heavy sites. 1.0.8: Fixed an error that occurred when multiple references to the same user-agent were detected within robots.txt file. 1.0.9: Fixed an issue with the canonical mismatch alert. 1.1.0: Various UI updates, including a JavaScript alert when the extension detects a URL change with no new HTTP request. 1.1.3: Added UGC, Sponsored and Nofollow link highlighting. 1.1.4: Switched off nofollow link highlighting by default on new installs and fixed a bug related to HTTP header canonical mismatches. 1.1.6: Extension now flags 404 errors in Red. 1.1.7: Not sending cookies when making a background request to fetch a page that was navigated to with pushstate. 1.1.8: Improvements to the handling of relative vs absolute canonical URLs and unencoded URL messaging. 1.2.0.11: Updating to Google's new manifest V3 and fixing small bugs. 1.2.0.12: Added a Spanish language version and made improvements to existing translations. Linking to new website https://www.checkrobots.com 1.2.0.13: Fixed pushState navigation data extraction, resolved inconsistent icon display, and added security protections to prevent logout issues with enterprise websites. 1.3.0: Introduced A.I. bot checking to monitor robots.txt exclusion rules for 14 bots across 6 companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Perplexity, Meta and Apple, with training, search indexing and real-time browsing bots tracked. New site exclusion feature lets you skip checking for specific domains. Fixes for SPA/back-forward navigation, x-robots-tag case sensitivity for Bingbot and Yahoo and improved allow/disallow rule precedence. Redesigned settings page with collapsible sections.
urlNeXT
urlNext is simple navigator button that ease you to do sequences pages (next page) based on link in the page or the URL of the page. The urlNeXT button will simple shown when it find previous/next link or numbers on the URL that you browse to. By clicking the button it will bring you to the next page. As example if you are browse to http://domain.name/page100.html by clicking the urlNeXT button will bring you to http://domain.name/page101.html Or you can use hot keys: - CTRL-SHIFT-LEFT ARROW - CTRL-SHIFT-RIGHT ARROW At first, urlNeXT will use link found on the page for previous or next link. If it does not found the link, the url numbers will be used. There is an animated page with arrow indicate the action occurred. The arrow may have 2 background color: - Blue is mean scanned linked is used - Green is mean numbers on the url is used If you feel this animation consumes much cpu, please let me know your CPU, GPU, OS, Chrome version. The animation is purely css (script only trigger to start the animation), so it's really depend to the chrome it-self how the animation being handled. For news,update, and/or response on comments, you can read at http://peprasetya.blogspot.com/search/label/urlNeXT Please see the change log below for feature list. If you find any problem and want to let me know, please don't just say "It's not work". Please give more detail, at least the url that you browse. Change Log: Version 2.0.0 (2 Jun 2026) - Update to manifest 3 and adapt new API call Version 1.7.6 (14 Aug 2014) - No new feature, just fixing to compatible with Goole Code Practice, otherwise it will not work Version 1.7.5 (6 Aug 2014) - Nothing changed except Chrome Extension meta as Google want update some meta files Version 1.7.4 (15 June 2012) - Update scan mechanism for Google Search, as Google may use some different page location. - Change the animation arrow following Google Chrome animation in Mac OS X when using swipe gesture on back and forward history. Version 1.7.2 (4 November 2011) - Link Scanner now scan https page. This only because now chrome by default use https in search page. So to be able activate link scanner, we have to allow the https being injected. Version 1.7.1 (16 September 2011) - Preload arrow image, fix on some occasion that the arrow not shown. - Add layer that pulled by the arrow to visualized new page is pulled for next/previous page. Version 1.7 (14 September 2011) - Animated arrow on next or previous action. The animation is taken between loading page time. So if the next/previous page load so fast, the animation may not occur or just half the progress, even the arrow image does not shown. - The animated arrow may indicate the type of the link used. If scanned link used for the next/previous link, it will use blue background. But if count number on the url, it will shown with green background. - Force scan links if the page does not fully loaded. On case the page load in very long time, it prevent urlNeXT to scan links. Version 1.6 (1 July 2011) - Scan links for blogspot base site and use older link for next page and newer link for previous page Version 1.5.4 (4 May 2011) - Update Google Search scanning method as Google change the navigation panel Version 1.5.3 (19 Nov 2010) - Use dynamic link URL, urlNext will use the latest url in the scanned links, so it can adapt if the page change the url on the fly. - Changed for Google Instant Search, the search result in re-scan on each action and adapt to latest change. Known issue, the icon will not adapt automatically if you change the search term, nor click the navigation on the result page. Version 1.5.2 (27 Aug 2010) - Change Icon - Bug fix for Url start with "/search" as reported by Devmake. Now it will scan links on the page. Version 1.5 (23 Apr 2010) - Bug fix with empty href attribute. The link will be no use if the href is empty. Version 1.4 (22 Apr 2010) - Bug fix with next link scanned from the page but does not have number in URL, It was not perform to the next page - Bug fix in scanning algorithm for finding next and previous text. Version 1.3 (21 Apr 2010) - Scan links on the page (https will be not scanned) to finding specific link for Previous and Next Link based on REL attribute or text for the link. - Custom page scan to find the links for search engine Google, Bing, and Yahoo. This will lead a malfunction if the search engine change the result page HTML structure. - There is 2 dot on top of urlNeXT icon to indicate the availability on prev and next link. Red dot means unavailable, while blue mean available for the link. Left top dot for previous link, right top dot for next link. Version 1.2 (12 Apr 2010) - Adding Hot Keys (CTRL-SHIFT-LEFT ARROW and CTRL-SHIFT-RIGHT ARROW). These hot keys only work on regular http, as I do not want to inject secure page (https)
GSC crawl stats downloader
instead of downloading 42 separate CSV files (by response, file type, purpose, Googlebot type and summary) this allows you to download everything with one click (and you can decide wether you want to only use the extension or if you want to backup the original CSVs as well)
Inspect Canonical
Easily check the canonical tag of a page A lightweight and extremely easy Chrome extension that tells you the canonical source of any URL you are on. No more combing through the source code to understand if/when canonical tags point to a new destination. This extension does all the heavy lifting for you. This extension will display one of three values. GREEN (self canonical) AMBER (Canonicalized) or RED (error) Below are the conditions Inspect Canonical tests for, in the order it tests for them: RED: 1. Page contains noindex robots meta Message: "Page contains robots 'noindex' tag. Canonical tags are ignored. Click to view source" 2. No canonical in head but there is one elsewhere Message: "Canonical tag exists but not in . Click to view source" 3. No canonical tag at all Message: "Page has no canonical tag. Click to view source" 4. More than one canonical tag on page Message: "Multiple ([X]) canonical tags found. Click to view source" 5. Canonical exists but is missing the href attribute Message: "Canonical tag is missing 'href' attribute. Click to view source" - This is an unlikely case but still something I wanted to check for AMBER: 6. Canonical present but differs to current URL Message: "Canonical tag points to another URL. Click to visit URL: [URL]" GREEN: 7. Canonical is present and correct Message: "Canonical tag points to current URL. Click to view source" So that's 7 hurdles to jump through to get a green status.