Category Archives: Google Chrome

Saving Your Research

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Evernote offers a great way to clip information while you are in the midst of a research project.  Microsoft OneNote can also help you to get organized.  A new extension for Google Chrome users enables saving of elements of a Web page or the page itself directly to Google Drive.  It’s called Save to Google Drive, naturally.

If you haven’t already committed to another research tool, and are heavy into the Google-verse, this seems like a great option.  Since Drive synchronizes to your computer, it means you can easily open up the content when you’re offline.  It has less of the organizational functionality of the research notebooks but that may be a boon for people who aren’t used to tagging or adding metadata to content.

Secure Your Browsing with Disconnect

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If you perform research outside of the office, you have a number of ways to secure your research session.  The most obvious is to use encrypted browser sessions, like searching https://www.google.com – note the s after the http – rather than the unencrypted site.  You might also use a VPN.  Lifehacker has a nice description of the Disconnect Web browser add-on, which can protect your wireless connection against sidejacking.  An added bonus is that it blocks some of the tracking done by advertisers and other sites while you’re surfing the Web.

Disconnect is a free add-on for Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, and Apple Safari.

Highlight and Save Pages with Annotary

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If you want to save and mark up Web pages with a tool that’s a bit lighter than Evernote or Microsoft OneNote, Annotary may be an option.  It is a browser extension for Firefox or Google Chrome.  When you hit a Web page that has content you want to save, you click the Annotary button in your Web browser toolbar and save the page.  You can add it to a collection – works like a folder – and you can also add a bookmark.

You can share a single page.  You can also create a group of people, sending them an invitation to participate, and share a collection with them.  This could work well for librarians supporting a practice group or faculty on a given project.  However, the sharing feature seems to be excessively social.  There is a way to see who else has annotated or highlighted the same page, and there doesn’t appear to be any way to turn off this sharing.

Save Attachments to Google Drive with Chrome Extension

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A lot of things going on in the Googleverse that can improve your Google Mail experience.  The oldest in the backlog of items I’ve been meaning to write about is an extension that allows you save e-mail attachments directly to your Google Drive account.  You have always been able to View or Download to your local machine.  If you are using your Drive space, though, or want to have the attachment accessible for editing in Google Docs, this can be a handy shortcut.

Under Chrome’s Hood: Grouping Your Chrome Extensions

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Modern Web browsers are powerful tools but they all can be improved and enhanced with add-ons or extensions.  These small software applications live inside the Web browser to provide extra features that the browser itself may be missing.  One issue with adding many extensions to your browser is that it can slow down your browser’s operation.  Another is that they become unwieldy to keep track of what is running and what is disabled.  Ghacks has an interesting post on the Context extension for Google Chrome.  It enables you to create groups of extensions so that you can turn on and off a grouping all at once.  This can be useful if you have a number of extensions for one purpose – say multimedia extensions that manage sound and video files – and you are doing some other sort of research.  Turn off extensions you aren’t using to speed up your browser, and save yourself from having to uninstall and reinstall extensions.

Look Up Information in Your Research Flow

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I am always on the lookout for easy to use, right-click tools that can be added to a Web browser to speed up research.  A recent addition is Liquid Information, formerly known as Hyperwords, that brings together a bunch of tools and is customizable to add your own reference and search resources.

The basic premise is that you run into information on a Web page that, if you highlight it, you can then send to another site or resource.  For example, if you come across the latin phrase mutatis mutandis in a legal opinion and you don’t know what it means, you can highlight the phrase, and a small button will appear next to the text if you have Liquid Information installed.

When you move your mouse pointer over the button, a menu pops up with a variety of things to do.  You can copy the information (including a link or a citation, similar to the Evernote Web clipper), send it to e-mail or a social media account like Twitter, or send it to a search engine or reference site.  If you wanted to know what that phrase meant, you might select the Merriam-Webster dictionary and quickly pull up a definition.

Liquid Information allows you to customize the list of resources, similar to what you might do with your Google or Firefox search bar.  You can right-click in a search box on almost any Web site and select the Add to Liquid Information option.  Theoretically, it will add this to your list.  My initial experience is that it adds it to SOME list but it doesn’t look like my list of resources.  Sometimes, when I mouse over the button, I see a completely different set of resources.

I like the default options since they supplement the other research tools I use and it makes it easy to flip information over to another site.  If you do a lot of business or competitive intelligence, there are quick links to common sites that show who owns the domain name, what it’s IP address is, and so on.   I am going to play around a bit with some of the less frequently used research sites that are in my own portfolio, and see which of them might be good candidates for filling out the Liquid Information menu.

Liquid Information for Chrome

Liquid Information for Firefox

Liquid Information for Safari