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Mozilla Firefox

Lewis

Member
Matthew Murray
Buzz up!on Yahoo!

Firefox is a capable and popular Web browser, and not just because of its speed and reliability: It offers an almost endless customizability that Google Chrome, Opera, and Safari don't try to emulate at all. Even Internet Explorer, despite its own selection of addons, Web Slices, and Accelerators, can't match Firefox for flexibility. There are thousands of Firefox addons available that let you change the way it looks and what it can do. Chances are that someone out there has already found a way to make Firefox do anything you've imaginedâ€â€and a lot of things you probably haven't.

We polled members of the PCMag.com staff to see what Firefox addons they can't live without, and narrowed down their responses to these ten favorites, which are listed below in alphabetical order. You can always find more on the Mozilla Organization Web site, but these should get you off to a good start.

Do you have a favorite Firefox addon we haven't mentioned? Leave a comment and let us know what it is!

1. ColorfulTabs: Turn your installation of Firefox into an artistic statement with ColorfulTabs. It makes every tab you open a different color, so they're easier to tell apart at a glanceâ€â€and a major part of a more vibrant, attractive Firefox window.

2. Cooliris: Surfing the Web can be informative and fun, but even the most dynamic Web sites look pretty much the same. Not anymore. Install Cooliris to view search results on sites like Google, YouTube, and Flickr, and photos from Facebook, Picasa, and your PC as an infinity-spanning 3D wall of windows.

3. Echofon: Love Twitter, but hate having it open on your PC all day or running a separate program to follow your friends? Echofon sends notifications of your followees' updates right to an icon in your status bar, so you can click and see them anytime you want, no matter what you're doing. Echofon supports multiple accounts and direct messages, too.

4. ForecastFox: Never again be caught without your umbrella or sunglasses just because you forgot to check for clouds before you left the house. Install ForecastFox to view AccuWeather.com weather forecasts from all over the country and the world right in the toolbars section of your browser window.

5. GooglePedia: The wealth of information available in Wikipedia is staggering, but it can be a pain to head over to it anytime you want to look up one little thing. GooglePedia solves this problem by displaying a related Wikipedia article along with your Google search results. The links in the Wikipedia article will automatically start new Google searches using those terms.

6. LastPass Password Manager: Keeping your various online log-ins secure is hard enough; remembering them all can be even bigger challenge. That's what's great about LastPass, which can keep track of your usernames and passwords for you, so you only need to remember a single log-in (the one you use for LastPass). It also fills in forms for you, helps you manage data across multiple computers, and can help you track down passwords you may have lost on your computer. (Check out our full review of LastPass.)

7. Morning Coffee: It happens to all of us: We want to check our favorite Web sites in the early mornings before work, but while we're still groggy from sleep we can't quite get the mouse or keyboard to work the right way. Morning Coffee saves you the trouble by letting you organize Web sites by day and open all that day's sites when you fire up Firefox. This addon could save you so much time, maybe you can catch a few more Zs before you log on.

8. StumbleUpon: The Web can be overwhelming and finding really interesting sites next to impossible. StumbleUpon can help: Click the "Stumble" button on the toolbar it adds to be taken to a site. If you like where you end up, click the "I like it!" button; if you don't, click the thumbs-down button. StumbleUpon learns from your answers (and those of millions of other users) to serve you better sites in the future.

9. Tab Mix Plus: Tired of the same old boring tabs? Load up Tab Mix Plus, and start duplicating them, closing multiple tabs at once, controlling when and why they open, and much more. You'll never go back to traditional tabs again.

10. Xmarks: If you're a compulsive bookmarker and you regularly use multiple PCs, Xmarks could save you a lot of frustration. It can back up and synchronize your bookmarks and passwords, and even can help you discover new sites you might be interested in (based on what other users are bookmarking).


 
Love firefox! Use it about 95% of the time, and when it's not firefox its usually chrome.

I'll add to that list the web developer toolbar and firebug - theyre awesome for web developers, so I sue them quite a bit. Chrome has something similar, but it's not as good.
 
Despite my best efforts, my computer will not run Explorer 8. I usually use Firefox, and occasionally use Opera, Chrome, or Maxthon.
 
Except for code testing, I never use IE for browsing - it's just too slow, error-happy and has a general lack of features.

Safari isn't too bad, but since I'm not an Apple person I tend to stick away from it a bit.
 
I also like the Safari browser, it is also the fastest loading browser, but I use Mozilla about 98 % of the time, and have been since it first came out.
 
Firefox all the way. :yes Tab Mix Plus is a great add-on. It allows you to move the tab bar to the bottom. That works better for me. Since the taskbar on my Windows and Linux machines is on the bottom, it just seems more intuitive to have the tabs there also.

Download Helper is a good add on to have if you want to easier download videos from You tube. Add Block Plus really comes in handy. Meebo add on is great too. Meebo allows you to easily use the most popular IMs without downloading and installing hacker-prone IM clients.
 
I get the idea that you are really savvy on Mozilla stuff, so here's a question: starting about 3 months ago, my Mozilla Thunderbird email program started randomly crashing. Last week, Firefox started doing it too. Running XP, service pack 3. None of the Mozilla forum users seem to have crash problems to discuss, I guess I am the only one dumb enough to break it, but if you have any suggestions, I'm listening -
Thanks.
 
I finally got Explorer 8 to work, but Firefox is much faster. I had been an Explorer fan since version 2, when we were competing with Netscape. But Chrome and Opera are also faster.
 
lovestodance said:
I get the idea that you are really savvy on Mozilla stuff, so here's a question: starting about 3 months ago, my Mozilla Thunderbird email program started randomly crashing. Last week, Firefox started doing it too. Running XP, service pack 3. None of the Mozilla forum users seem to have crash problems to discuss, I guess I am the only one dumb enough to break it, but if you have any suggestions, I'm listening -
Thanks.
Hmm, not to buy into a conspiracy but maybe a Windows update did something to interfere with the operation of the Mozilla software. I wouldn't put it past Microsoft. :lol

Make sure both Mozilla programs are the latest versions. If they are, I would uninstall them and then reinstall them with the latest downloads.
 
Vince said:
Lovestodance, I recommend that you uninstall Firefox and re-install it.

I can do that, any suggestions as to how to keep a file of my bookmarks for Firefox, and my address books and messages I need to save in Thunderbird?
Can I save them on a separate hard drive and then copy them back in?

Thanks
 
Check the Mozilla community for ways to backup bookmarks and configuration of Thunderbird and Firefox. There is a way but it escapes me right now. :shrug
 
Well... I just loaded Windows 7 which came with IE 8 by default...

I noticed that when you get to typing long replies on this forum with IE 8, within the box (currently, the one I'm typing in before I hit submit) the text will start to jump around as you type, and if you go below the bottom of the box to highlight something for say, to bold, you can't just highlight a small section as it highlights up to the top of the box where the text wasn't jumping all over the place :grumpy

Anyway, I just installed Firefox and hey, what do you know. No problems :D
 
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