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Episode: 3945
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Title: HPR3945: My chrome plugins
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3945/hpr3945.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:44:45
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,945 for Friday the 15th of September 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, My Chrome Plugins.
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It is hosted by Daniel Person and is about five minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Daniel Person summarizes the essential plug-ins.
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He uses every day.
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Hello, hackers and welcome to another podcast with Daniel.
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And I'm going to talk about a bunch of different subjects and I'm doing like ShatGPT.
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Really good at creating a bunch of words without any real knowledge behind them.
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But the topics that I'm going to talk about are pretty random and I'm going to split them up.
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Hi again, in this episode I would go through what kind of Chrome Plugins I'm using.
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And what I think is a good Chrome Plugin and what I think is not so good,
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or something that you just should stay away from.
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And I have a bunch of plugins and some of them are essential for my work.
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First off, you need some kind of password vault solution.
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I will not recommend anyone of them.
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I just would say that you don't use a last pass.
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I used it before and I have migrated it from it and it took a lot of work to move all those passwords over.
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But now I have them in another password vault solution and having that as a Chrome Plugin,
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I think is a very good solution.
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And as I used to, YouTuber, I also used the TubeBuddy plugin.
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It's pretty good to do some of these kind of bucket or big changes.
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If you want to go through a bunch of videos and change descriptions,
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and so on, it has a lot of those kinds of tools in it.
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So it's not for everyone, but I think it's really useful.
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Next up, I have this kind of Grammarly plugin and I am a little bit just electric.
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I'm not a native English speaker.
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So having some grammar check and some help when I'm writing is also essential for my work.
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Next up, I have something that is called Colorsilla.
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And it is a tool that makes it possible for me to just choose any point on any web page
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and get the color value of that point.
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And when you are writing and creating web pages, it's really nice to look around and work
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with different things and really quickly could get a specific color either from an image
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or from somewhere on the page in order to reuse that color in some other elements.
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So it's a really good tool if you're doing web development.
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And before I also have this kind of thing for taking snapshots, that was really good.
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But now that I run a Bonto, that tool is actually built into a Bonto.
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I don't think that Windows has a simple, good snapshot solution yet.
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They are working on it.
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It's getting better, but the old one was worthless because you had to pretty much take a snapshot,
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put it into a document, save the document and crop and fix and so on.
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And in Bonto, everything is built in, which is really nice.
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And what do I have more?
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I also before had these kind of solutions to run things in browser stacks.
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A browser stack is this solution where you can go to a web page, use their plugin
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in order to log into their web page and then test your solution or your web page
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in a bunch of different web browsers.
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So you can test it on iOS browsers, you can test it on Android browsers, Mac, Windows
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and Linux with different kind of browsers.
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You have some browsers that are native to the Eastern Europe and you also have some
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that are native to the USA.
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It's really nice that you have a lot of different choices there.
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So you can see that your solutions works in all the different supported browsers.
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So those are the most common plugins that I install in my workflow.
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What kind of browser plugins do you use?
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I know that there are not that many, but I think they are extremely essential for my workflow.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, and Hacker Public Radio doesn't work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording
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or classed, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, 4.0
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International License.
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