My Favorite Chrome Extensions Right Now – And What They Do

It’s a fairly regular occurrence that people watch one of my screencast videos and then ask me what all of the extensions are that appear in my Chrome browser. My students often comment on all the extensions that I have installed. To be honest, sometimes I install an extension just to try it out and then forget to uninstall it. But there I do have a handful of Chrome extensions that are my favorites and are in regular use right now. Here they are in no particular order. 

OneNote Web Clipper
I use OneNote for most my bookmarking activities these days. I particularly like using the OneNote web clipper to save entire articles without saving the related sidebar content or headers and footers from a webpage. Here’s a little overview of how I use it.


StayFocusd

StayFocusd (intentionally misspelled) lets me set time limits for accessing the websites that I’m prone to wasting time on (Facebook, Twitter, and CyclingTips). With StayFocusd installed in Chrome I can set a daily time limit for the sites I tend to waste time visiting. When I reach that time limit I’m blocked from visiting that site for 24 hours. A little countdown timer is shown when I do visit the sites on my list. I wrote a bit more about StayFocusd a couple of years ago when I went on a Facebook faste.

Mote

This is one that I just started using last week and I already love it. Mote lets me add voice comments to Google Classroom and Google Docs. It also makes it very easy to add audio recordings to Google Slides. I published a few videos about it on my YouTube channel. You can watch the one about using Mote in Google Slides right here.


Loom and Screencastify

I make the majority of my screencast videos on a Windows 10 computer with Screencast-o-matic’s desktop recorder. But when I need to make a screencast on a Chromebook I use either Loom or Screencastify. I publish a comparison of the two here.


Nimbus Screenshot

When I need to create annotated screenshot on a Chromebook, Nimbus Screenshot is the tool that I use. I’ve been using it for years and it’s always worked well. Here’s a little overview of how it works.


How to Manage Chrome Extensions

I don’t always remember to remove the extensions that I’m not using. I’m going to do it now that I’m thinking about it. From a security standpoint, it’s a good idea to remove the extensions that you’re not using on regular basis. Here’s how to manage Chrome extensions.

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Thank You Readers for 14 Amazing Years!