![]() Though really, would it ever even be necessary to use the drop-down list with its snazzy interface? Isn't it just superflous and therefore baggage for your system resources? How has it come to this? Perhaps the way forward would meld the old with the new: selection as it was but now reflected in the drop down list should you need to open it, and with a working memory. But by the time you get that far your bird will have flown, your flow will have juddered, your information juggernaut will have been forced off the highway for an unscheduled pitstop with the driver leaning out of the window shouting, 'what the %&$!*!?'. It even remembers your selection if you close the list up without operating on it immediately. And the way it allows you to operate on the tabs is snazzy too. The way it lets you select the tabs is very nice. Only then can you select what tabs you want to operate on. You may even have to click to get to the icon to open the tabs list, if you have more add-on competing for space on your browser bar. You having to click an icon to open the tabs list before you can select the tabs. ![]() It also can't handle it when you have a large number of tabs open. But this does not make up for the inconvenience of introducing further steps and waits to select and operate on tabs. This does helpfully display the full names of all your open tabs. You have to open a drop down-down menu that lists all the tabs you have open. The new version no longer allows you to select tabs themselves. Or you could just right-click and perform quick operations on all tabs. ![]() With a simple right-click you could then perform operations on the selected tabs - such as bookmark, move and close. It allowed you to select tabs by clicking on them as you would anything else on a desktop: using the shift key to select a sequence of tabs and using the tab key to bring separate individual tabs into the same group. The thing that made it great was its intuitive operation. Firefox is drastically less essential without it. Multiple Tab Handler used to be the single-most useful feature of Firefox after tabs themselves. The new version has a nice-looking interface. The ability to select and move multiple tabs is useful and intuitive that it seem seems native to Firefox. Nevertheless, I believe I cannot live without this plugin. Unless I can make it always save 'web page complete', this function is useless to me. ![]() When I save pages using the multiple tabs plugin, it usually saves 'html only', though sometimes it saves 'web page complete'. When I usually save a web page, the Firefox save dialog gives me the option of saving either 'html only' or 'web page complete'. This plugin could do with some file saving options. Paypal Donation needs to be enabled for Piro's extensions. Moz-extension://27b1e6ca-d9a9-4fc5-95b7-e4748f3303ca/replaced/replaced.html?state=redirect&title=Scientists%20on%20new%20supernova%3A%20WTF%20have%20we%20been%20looking%20at%3F%20%7C%20Ars%20Technica&url=https%3A///science/2017/11/scientists-on-new-supernova-wtf-have-we-been-looking-at/%3Fcomments%3D1%26post%3D34302387&favIconUrl=https%3A///favicon.icoīut at least the copy is successful (not blank), and can do a regex transform to clean it up.Ĭreation of a Tab Group folder (in tree style tab) requires manually going to a moz-extension url, such as: Scientists on new supernova: WTF have we been looking at? | Ars Technica Slightly awkward for dragging of selected tabs - need to click the menu bar's "select and do" icon to close the context-menu pop-up, then can re-click on selected tabs to move them.Ĭopy Title & URI doesn't work very well on unloaded tabs yet - copies the stored data, e.g. Only appears to be missing "gather to new tree|folder."
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