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Stylus was forked from Stylish for Chrome in 2017 [1] [2] after Stylish was bought by the analytics company SimilarWeb. [3] The initial objective was to "remove any and all analytics, and return to a more user-friendly UI." [4] It restored the user interface of Stylish 1.5.2 [5] [2] and removed Google Analytics. [1] [2]
Download QR code; Print/export ... is a JSON-formatted archive file format for logging of a web browser's interaction with a site. The common extension for these ...
JSONiq primarily provides means to extract and transform data from JSON documents or any data source that can be viewed as JSON (e.g. relational databases or web services). The major expression for performing such operations is the SQL -like “ FLWOR expression” that comes from XQuery.
Chrome Web Store was publicly unveiled in December 2010, [2] and was opened on February 11, 2011, with the release of Google Chrome 9.0. [3] A year later it was redesigned to "catalyze a big increase in traffic, across downloads, users, and total number of apps". [4]
JSON Feed is a Web feed file format for Web syndication in JSON instead of XML as used by RSS and Atom. [1] A range of software libraries and web frameworks support content syndication via JSON Feed. [2] Supporting clients include NetNewsWire, NewsBlur, [3] ReadKit and Reeder.
The glTF format stores data primarily in JSON. The JSON may also contain blobs of binary data known as buffers, and refer to external files, for storing mesh data, images, etc. [7] The binary .glb format also contains JSON text, but serialized with binary chunk headers to allow blobs to be directly appended to the file.
They are distributed through Chrome Web Store, [89] initially known as the Google Chrome Extensions Gallery. [87] Some extensions focus on providing accessibility features. Google Tone is an extension developed by Google that when enabled, can use a computer's speakers to exchange URLs with nearby computers with an Internet connection that have ...
The web app manifest [35] is a World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) specification defining a JSON-based manifest (usually labelled manifest.json) [31] to provide developers with a centralized place to put metadata associated with a web application including: The name of the web application; Links to the web app icons or image objects