7 comments

[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 27.4 ms ] thread
This brought back some memories. In July 2004, I made a Firefox extension to "fix" a bad redesign of the website All Music Guide (my blog post: http://www.holovaty.com/writing/all-music-guide/). To my knowledge this was the first instance of a site-specific browser extension.

Aaron Boodman saw that idea and took it much farther by developing Greasemonkey, which made the idea more general and more powerful.

That's a very cool bit of history! Adding it to my list of references/updates to make to the blog post
I was hoping there'd be more of the oddball dead-ends like the python Grail browser or the tcl plugin for Netscape.
Author of the blog post here! If you comment with corrections/milestones I missed, I'll try to incorporate them

I'll also be attempting to update the augmented browsing/browser extension Wikipedia page in the coming weeks

> One notable startup I’ve come across is Insight Browser, an iOS browser that allows users to build and share simple extensions.

I've worked with the Insight [1] folks (YC W19, I think?) to port my Chrome extension [2] to their platform. They made it super easy, and I'd recommend others give them a try. Not every extension makes sense on iOS, but for those that do, this can be a slick way to finally reach iOS users.

Hopefully Insight can popularize mobile extensions and generate some competition in the mobile browser space!

1: https://www.insightbrowser.com

2: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/beeline-reader/ifj...