Recensioni per JavaScript Toggle On and Off (WebExtension)
JavaScript Toggle On and Off (WebExtension) di tlintspr
Recensione di Riksoft
Valutata 4 su 5
di Riksoft, 7 anni faThe addon is good but, for Mozilla's fault, the addons have lost power on what they can do (not only this one).
As such, this addon does not enable/disable the javascript flag (about:config, javascript.enable=false) anymore, on the contrary it only BLOCK the execution, and there is a chasm between TOGGLING and BLOCKING.
Toggling JS off means that website can see you don't have JS and it doesn't waste time sending scripts. It also means that the website can adapt itself for browsers without JS so that you can have it working partially or even 100% even without JS.
On the contrary, blocking means the website knows nothing about your browser blocking JS, so:
- The band/time is wasted because it sends the JS script anyway
- the website doesn't work well or at all (try google image: empty page. With a real toggler it was 100% useable without JS).
Result: None of the JS toggler for FF 57+ can really act as a toggler and we have the above problems.
The problem is not of this extension or is a developer fault, the problem is Mozilla Firefox way (and Google Chrome is even worse).
As such, this addon does not enable/disable the javascript flag (about:config, javascript.enable=false) anymore, on the contrary it only BLOCK the execution, and there is a chasm between TOGGLING and BLOCKING.
Toggling JS off means that website can see you don't have JS and it doesn't waste time sending scripts. It also means that the website can adapt itself for browsers without JS so that you can have it working partially or even 100% even without JS.
On the contrary, blocking means the website knows nothing about your browser blocking JS, so:
- The band/time is wasted because it sends the JS script anyway
- the website doesn't work well or at all (try google image: empty page. With a real toggler it was 100% useable without JS).
Result: None of the JS toggler for FF 57+ can really act as a toggler and we have the above problems.
The problem is not of this extension or is a developer fault, the problem is Mozilla Firefox way (and Google Chrome is even worse).
123 recensioni
- Valutata 3 su 5di Utente Firefox 18827259, 16 giorni fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di 远离中共邪教快退出党团队, un mese fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Richard, 3 mesi fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Utente Firefox 18512180, 8 mesi fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Utente Firefox 18272483, un anno fa
- Valutata 1 su 5di JJ, un anno faIt only blocks scripts and only external scripts. It doesn't actually disable JS. So, NOSCRIPT HTML tags won't work.
- Valutata 5 su 5di Davis, un anno faEasy to use for a Firefox fancier.
U can JS on/off so quickly.
Simple <3 - Valutata 5 su 5di 天灭中共退党团队保平安, 2 anni fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Fish in the percolator, 2 anni faThis is a great add-on. It has become an essential tool that has really optimized my browsing experience. Recommend pinning icon to toolbar for quick toggling on/off as needed.
- Valutata 5 su 5di MikeA, 2 anni faExcellent! I've been wanting this toggle control in firefox for a long time now. A sorely missing control. My primary browser is firefox, but I sometimes switch to safari when I want to stop javascript on a particular webpage. This toggle button addon bascially does the same thing here that safari does in it's preferences -> security pane. Plus the addition that it automatically reloads the page for you. (It also has a preference setting to let you control auto-reloading in both directions.) It's even worth a small donation! (but it's not clear I can set the amount?)
- Valutata 5 su 5di Fabio Tatagiba, 3 anni faMuito bom, em sites que necessita do JAVA simplesmente ele ativa e se quiser desligo num clique, se você está procurando aitvar o Java para jogar, ver animações ou escutar musica em sites que usa java , use esse aplicativo , ele usa o webextensao java, uma alternativa sem complicação e instalação do java.
- Valutata 4 su 5di pererik22, 3 anni fa
- Valutata 4 su 5di Utente Firefox 14618453, 3 anni faDoes what it promises, but the toolbar switch disables JS globally (on all sites) until you enable it again. Usually I just want to disable it on one specific site, temporarily or permanently. In the addon settings there are options to white- and blacklist sites, but I wish there was a shortcut for this.
- Valutata 5 su 5di Dario Pintaric, 3 anni fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Utente Firefox 16969207, 4 anni fa
- Valutata 4 su 5di Utente Firefox 13302001, 4 anni fa
- Valutata 5 su 5di Utente Firefox 14797119, 4 anni faThis little magical button belongs right on the side of your URL bar. Honestly, it should be built in as standard on 100% of Browsers.
--Then everyone can actively interact with JavaScript and stop being dictated by others. There is a 100% chance that JavaScript is currently interacting with everyone already, whether they know it or not!! So why not put the power back in your hands?
Imagine yourself on a lazy Sunday afternoon, quietly reading an article about meditation... when BAM!!! All of a sudden this OBNOXIOUS, bright-red, completely unnecessary pop-up window instantly COVERS your screen.
Now stay calm. This is the right time to just take a deep breath. Feel free to shake your head slowly in righteous moral superiority,towards this blatantly uninvited, rude behavior. For now it is time yet again to casually slide your cursor up onto the right-side of your address bar. *Click!* Oh the magic little button. What a relief. Life is right back to what you were previously occupied doing.
At that moment, you can have this additional satirical moment acting out as the stern, a-bit-too-mean-but-fair second grade teacher actively scolding this particular immature and annoying web designer:
"Sorry Timmy, but for today you have lost your ability to use JavaScript. We're not going to act out like that, anymore; okay bud? Tomorrow I'll think about maybe giving your privileges back, but as for now... they're 100% gone.
So now go sit in the corner, so the rest of us can get back to what's actually important." - Valutata 5 su 5di Alexandre Costa, 4 anni fa