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Go Vertical! With LCD monitors there's a lot more 'screenestate' on the sides than there is on the top or bottom. Most sites are longer than wider; some leave wide margins at the sides. Having my Taskbar on the side gave me more to see with less scrolling but your (excellent) add-on reclaimed the gained veiwspace. I have a hunch that the new screen shape will eventually cause all menu bars to migrate to the side.
I would like to see ThumbStrips add features that would: a). have an option to automatically save every browser session into an individual ThumbStrips file, into a user-designated directory. if a user forgets to save ThumbStrips before exiting Firefox, that session's ThumbStrips are not lost. A user can always delete the files themselves or could set a "maximum number of days to retain ThumbStrips browser session files" to manage storage preferences. b.) make ThumbStrips mirror the functions of History. we could sort by site, by date, by date and site, or in last visited order. (i believe there is some other Firefox add on that creates a thumbnail for every site recorded in the system history file, but i personally have not been able to get it to function correctly, and ThumbStrips' GUI is more modern and functionally rich.) Thanks.
How about giving a bigger thumbnail when hovering over the ThumbStrips. Cause a small illegible thumbnail is just as worse as a the current FF history, which pretty much defeats your purpose.
Currently, there's a pre-release agreement/license that you need to agree to before grabbing thumbstrips. There's also an MPL license included in the actual extension files themselves. Which of these takes precedence?
I would like to fix a few feature additions that I see would be useful, but can't currently do this with the pre-release license that I agreed to on download. This is a significant issue for me, as I'm used to being able to improve the software I run (I run linux and other Free Software like firefox for a reason).
Could the licenses be more clear? Either removing the MPL, or removing the pre-release license? Also, when will the pre-release be over, and will it be released as true MPL, or will another license be inserted in it's place? I suppose I ask because if there will be a restrictive license that does not comply with the OSI requirements, I need to look into building my own tool that achieves the same result and functionality, but is useful to the Open Source world as a whole.
I think that there should be an option to display the title of the site along with the thumbnail. The URL usually has no significant relevance to a site that I would be looking for. For example, an article on zen may be hidden away at someonesname.blogger.com and the article would look like any other page with a lot of words on it. However, the title might include zen in the name, and thus would be easier to find if one were able to see the title of the site along with the thumbnail.
I suggest storing separate thumb strips for each active tab. Many people browse the web in a parallel fashion: browsing for restaurants in a review forum, comparing several restaurants in multiple tabs, viewing menus in other tabs and locating those restaurants in a tab with an interactive map. Moreover, each of these tabs will likely have a history of pages relating to the page currently in view.
When a web browser presents the histories of all of these tabs as a single merged strip of pages, the pages of the multiple tabs can become intermingled. For example, a page viewed 30 minutes ago in a first tab will be separated from the page currently in the first tab by a host of pages from other tabs. Accordingly, a user is faced with the extra burden of discerning which pages in the merged strip correspond to the site in the tab focus and then choosing from those pages the actual page of interest. Including separate tab histories for each tab allows a person to move back and forth between pages related to a single tab without having to first discern which pages in a merged strip correspond to the site in the tab focus.
Since I have never programmed for Firefox I am unfamiliar with the API and cannot offer specific advice, but the general idea is 1) detect all new tabs (whether opened singly or together, such as when a previous browser history with multiple tabs is loaded at startup); 2) uniquely identify all new tabs; 3) determine which active tab has the focus; 4) detect and store newly loaded pages in a strip dedicated to the active tab; 5) detect a tab closure; 6) identify the closed tab and 7) flush that tab's strip. All the while, ThumbStrips can also maintain a single merged strip as it currently does. In that case, instead of storing a duplicate image of each page, each page can be tagged with a tab ID and a tab-specific strip can be presented as a filtered strip based on the tab ID. This latter option may be preferably considering ThumbStrips already includes a strip filtering mechanism.
This suggestion was made once before (Peter, ThumbStrips 1.5 Comment Archive at comment 53, 23 February 2008), but I am very interested in seeing it realized. Currently, the lack of tab-sensitive strips prevents the practical use of this otherwise outstanding extension.
Poor Mozilla performance problems when using Thumbstrips on sites featuring FLV (Flash videos). Videos will be choppy and slow, but at regular intervals of XX seconds. The exact time changes depending on the size of the FLV. Performance speeds up when I stop Thumbstrips from recording.
Excellent add-on! Strongly recommended. Just one question: How to have the TS icon show ONLY in the Status Bar (lower right) and NOT in the Navigation Toolbar (which is already overloaded?) I do not find anything in the Preferences. Thanks for helping
I use a widescreen monitor. What with my toolbars and Thumbstrips it doesn't leave much room for the web page.
Can the Thumbstrips be moved to the right hand side of a page rather than along the bottom ?
I wanted to consolidate some of the questions we are often asked about ThumbStrips. I hope this makes it easier to find answers to your questions.
1. If I close Firefox is my thumbstrip saved automatically?
Yes it is automatically saved, but will be overwritten each browser session. They are located here:
- Windows: C:\Documents and Settings\*username*\Application Data\Mozilla\Profiles\*.default\chrome\filmstrips\_ThumbStrips History from Last Browser Session.film
- Mac OS X (Leopard): ./Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/*.default/chrome/filmstrips/_ThumbStrips History from Last Browser Session.film
- Linux: /home/*username*/.mozilla/firefox/*.default/chrome/filmstrips/_ThumbStrips History from Last Browser Session.film
2. ThumbStrips slows down my machine
We optimized the code as much as possible, so here are some suggestions
- upgrade to FF3. They have improved memory leak issues and it runs much faster.
- Go to Configure -> Options -> More -> and change how often snapshots are taken to “less frequently”
3. Is there a shortcut for opening and closing the ThumbStrips window?
- Yes, F2 or CTRL-SHIFT-F
- Also, F4 turns recording on and off
I will keep this list updated as we get more great questions.
What do you think of using Get Satisfaction as the primary method of support for ThumbStrips?
We have been relying on using our blog on www.thumbstrips.com to have questions asked and answered. There are many blog posts, so the questions are often scattered which makes them difficult to answer in one place. We rely on your great suggestions to keep improving ThumbStrips, so having a single place to consolidate the feedback seems like a great way to learn from you.