The extensions I would recommend are
- Whatfont: Find the name of any font used on a website
- Wordtune : Edit and proofread (this is a paid app, worth every penny)
- Toby : Bookmark app
- Wappalyzer : Find what tech stack they are using on a website
What's your recommendation?
@rebeccatany It seems like there are a lot of SEO tools out there, what makes Moz stand out?
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Is it true that chrome extensions are sometimes considered as a software category, of a kind?
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Trying to understand what are the benefits (for a founder) to use a service in a chrome browser specifically. Instead of using it in a mobile app or a browser or whatever
@nadenade They're legit, of course. Developers seem to do many of these for fun, but there are hundreds of extensions that make a decent amount of profit.
@nadenade One of the benefit of using chrome extension is that you can use it over the top of other websites. For example, I use blackmagic.so over twitter.com and it provides simple CRM, Analytics and many useful features over the twitter.
Grammarly, not a CEO or anything but being a solo maker it's a lot of content writing, e-mailing, and tweeting, Grammarly automatically fixing it all up is a life-saver.
Try Let Me Search. It's a tool to help you build your personal search engine. Allows you to save and recall anything on the internet.
Disclosure: I helped build it.
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