kana
example-chrome-extension
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kana | example-chrome-extension | |
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2 | 13 | |
3 | 52 | |
- | - | |
1.7 | 7.2 | |
about 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
kana
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Ask HN: What weird technical scene are you fond/part of?
usig modern web technologies to develop high performance scientific applications. We built a highly optimized, interactive and exploratory application for single-cell data analysis[1]. it runs purely in the browser with no backend and scales upto 200K cells. similar efforts include the biowasm project [2].
[1] https://github.com/jkanche/kana
- Kana: Single Cell RNA-Sequencing Analysis in the Browser
example-chrome-extension
- Browser extensions spy on you, even if its developers don't
- Google authentication in Chrome extension
- Newbie developer
- Let's build a Chrome extension that steals everything
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Any good tutorial or course to learn chrome extensions dev
Shameless plug: I was totally dissatisfied with the state of extension documentation and tutorials, so I wrote a book on building Chrome extensions: https://www.buildingbrowserextensions.com/
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For your next side project, make a browser extension
I was enthusiastic enough about extensions that I decided to publish a book about building them: https://www.buildingbrowserextensions.com/
Browser extensions are severely underrated as a platform because they aren't sexy. For all that mobile devices have given us, so much of our work continues to be done using a desktop browser. Enhancements such as augmenting websites with widgets, supplying contextual information, and automating repetitive tasks using the authenticated session - when applied appropriately - can save someone hours every day.
- Learn to create modern Chrome extensions with React, OAuth, and manifest v3
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Ask HN: What weird technical scene are you fond/part of?
Browser extensions. Not quite a website, not quite a mobile app, and surprisingly pervasive. Most people don't realize how incredibly powerful they are, even with manifest v3.
I almost fell out of my chair when I found out there were no books on how to build them, so I wrote one: https://www.buildingbrowserextensions.com/ It was incredibly enjoyable to go through the APIs and write about all the different crazy things they can do.
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“UBO Minus (MV3)” – An Experimental uBlock Origin Build for Manifest V3
I was frustrated with the lack of resources, so I'm publishing a book on it: "Building Browser Extensions". Available later this year. https://www.buildingbrowserextensions.com/
And check out the companion extension: https://www.buildingbrowserextensions.com/b2x
What are some alternatives?
SVM-Face-and-Object-Detection-Shader - SVM using HOG descriptors implemented in fragment shaders
brave-browser - Brave browser for Android, iOS, Linux, macOS, Windows.
FreePSXBoot - Exploit to allow loading arbitrary code on the PSX using only a memory card (no game needed)
plasmo - 🧩 The Browser Extension Framework
AdGuardMV3 - AdGuard browser extension prototype based on the new Manifest V3
google-api-javascript-client - Google APIs Client Library for browser JavaScript, aka gapi.
new-wave - Stack Computer Bytecode Interpreters: The New Wave
Speed-Run-Sidebar - A Display + Controller to integrate with OBS
pagoda2 - R package for analyzing and interactively exploring large-scale single-cell RNA-seq datasets
TablaM - The practical relational programing language for data-oriented applications
uBOL-home - uBO Lite home (MV3)