Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Munging your world with Greasemonkey
Merlin Mann | Mar 31 2005
Simon Willison: Greasemonkey as a lightweight intermediary The latest release of the swiss army knife of Firefox extensions adds support for cross-domain XMLHttpRequest calls from greasemonkey scripts. What that means is that you can create a user script (a short JavaScript that will be executed whenever your browser loads specific pages) that can then pull extra data in from another server. Although I still use Safari as my main browser, Greasemonkey really gets me thinking about moving over to Firefox full time. Although I’m still getting my head around everything that Greasemonkey can do, I’m really fascinated by the idea that a web site (and now, if I understand this right, a web application?) can be munged to your needs and preferences so easily. I’ve sampled from the page of available scripts, and I have to say it’s a pretty mind-blowing hack. (Thank you for "fixing" All Music Guide!) The implications of things like Greasemonkey and PithHelmet catching on seem far-reaching. Think about the benefits of taking web standards to the next level and making sites that can anticipate and acknowledge your visitor’s preferences from their first visit (via standard DIV names or calls to your public “preferences??? file). I wouldn’t begin to know how to make this stuff, but I can definitely see myself becoming a grateful consumer. 11 Comments
POSTED IN:
Greasemonkey is really cool, and...Submitted by Erik A. Drabløs (not verified) on April 1, 2005 - 1:37am.
Greasemonkey is really cool, and the possiblities seem endless. What I don't like about it though, is that a lot of people are using it to disable ordinary ads. While ads are a tad annoying, they are often necessary to pay some of the costs of running a large site. An option for web developers that could be worth giving a second thought would be to give each user the possibility of becoming a micropatrons in return for removing ads on the site for that user. I doubt however that most of those who use greasemonkey to enjoy ad-free bandwith-leeching would be willing to pay anything at all. :/ » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |