Showing posts with label extensions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label extensions. Show all posts

15 Essential Chrome Extensions For Google Drive | Dramel Notes

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Google Drive is pretty amazing as it is, but how can it be improved? With certain apps and extensions for Google Drive that integrate it with other services, you can make better use of the cloud storage service and do even more with it.

If you’re immersed in the Google/Chrome/Android system, you’ve probably got a bunch of files on Google Drive and you use Google Docs whenever possible. And if that’s the case, you’re going to love these extensions and apps to make better use of your Drive space and the files you keep there.

Note that some of these are really web apps with a Chrome app link, just as the official Google Drive and Google Sheets and Google Docs apps are, but they’re still worth installing (and bookmarking) to keep all the best tools at your fingertips in the Chrome App Launcher — especially if you’re using a Chromebook!

Kami (AKA Notable PDF)

Kami is one of many amazing PDF tools for Google Drive, but it also works with DOCX documents, PowerPoint files and popular image formats. It lets you annotate these documents and share them with Google Drive collaborators. It’s perfect for group research projects or researching personal projects, like weddings or renovations.

Music Player For Google Drive

If you keep audio files in your Google Drive storage (as opposed to in Google Play Music), you still want to be able to play them easily. There is an official Audio Player tool for playing your audio files, but it’s not for everyone. This extension lets you take those files and create a quick playlist you can save in a lightweight browser player.

Drive Template Gallery

Drive templates are a great way to get a particular type of document up and running quickly, and despite having a fantastic directory of templates, Google seems determined to obfuscate them from view so you forget they’re even there. This extension puts the template gallery back into the “Create” menu, so you’ll remember to check the template gallery before recreating the wheel.

DriveTunes

DriveTunes is yet another way to play your Google Drive audio files, but it’s a little more comprehensive. It loads up all of your available files (or whichever folders you want loaded) so you can browse them and play them really easily. As a Google Drive user, it’s an essential addition to the best music extensions for Chrome.

JoliCloud

JoliCloud is for people who use Google Drive along with a number of other cloud storage services. It lets you connect all of your accounts and search for files across them all at once. This is a neat service, but it’s just one of many ways you can manage multiple cloud storage spaces.

For instance, if you’re using a Chromebook you could always add these cloud storage services to your file system, then use your Chrome app launcher to search through them all.

Drive Notepad

This is mostly for Chromebook users, as they find there is a real need for an app that just lets you quickly add a few notes into a simple document. This is that app — plus, it syncs to Google Drive. It could be useful for anyone who wants synced notes.

Drive Migrator

If you’re setting up a new Google Apps account, you’ll note that you can’t change the owner of your old files to a new account. Instead, if you want to copy all your files to the new account, this tool is exactly what you need.

Drive Files To Dropbox

If you need to back up your Google Drive, the Drive Files to Dropbox extension will get you there. It downloads the files to your local hard drive and moves them to Dropbox, so you may find you need a lot of local drive space and bandwidth.

Translate For Drive

If you work with people on the other side of the world or have some other reason for needing to translate documents all the time, this is going to become your favorite tool. All you do is find your document on Google Drive and get a full translation immediately. Yes, you could cut-and-paste text into Google Translate, but this just makes things so much easier. Seriously, it’s the best thing for workplace translation since Gmail auto-translate.

DocuSign

DocuSign is the essential signing tool for Google Drive documents. If someone sends you any file that requires your signature, you can immediately add it and send the signed file right back to them — all within Google Drive.

It works the other way around too, in that if you want to ask for a signature on a Google document you can guide participants through the signing process using DocuSign. Use this for your banking, insurance, work, legal documents or whatever else life throws at you.

Gantter For Google Drive

Have you ever used Microsoft Project? Well, Gantter is a free cloud-based alternative that works almost exactly the same way and integrates seamlessly with Google Drive. You can easily attach Google Drive docs to your Gantt charts and save your Gantter files to Google Drive.

Besides being a solid project manager, Gantter also includes iCal export, easy Google-style collaboration and a collaborator chat, which makes it incredibly useful for group projects.

Simple Invoicing

Do you need a quick template to bill someone for a few hours of work? Would you want that invoice to appear in your Gmail ready to send? How about automatically logging the invoice in a Google Sheet? Simple Invoicing is a freelancer’s dream app. The only bad reviews this app gets is for the invoice itself being too simple, but it is absolutely perfect for simple invoicing, as it says.

LucidPress

If you’re a fan of InDesign, or just need a program to do the same things, LucidPress is your ideal Google Drive extension alternative, as it uses Google Drive seamlessly. Use it to make magazines, flyers, company reports or any other design work you’ve got planned. It’s entirely cloud-based and perfect for Chromebook usage.

Envelopes For Google Drive

If you ever need to do real-world posting of paper, you probably need a way to print up professional envelopes. This is basically the perfect envelope template maker for Google Docs, so you can get all the right information in the right places.

PDF Compressor – Small PDF

Of all the PDF converting tools out there, this is by far the most comprehensive and slick. Small PDF (AKA PDF Compressor) lets you grab files from your local drive, Google Drive or Dropbox, then manipulate them in all sorts of ways.

With Small PDF, you can convert Word documents, PowerPoint documents, Excel spreadsheets, and JPG images to PDF — or vice versa to convert PDFs to these file types. You can also make PDFs smaller, split them into multiple PDFs, merge them into one PDF, rotate PDFs, and protect or unlock PDFs.

What Else Should Google Drive Do in Chrome?

What more would you need Google Drive to do? Is there an app or Google Drive function that you really wish someone would emulate in a Chrome extension or app? Tell us!

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20 Awesome Music Extensions for Chrome | Dramel Notes

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For those of us who love using Chrome for our daily browsing, having the perfect music extensions on hand is pretty much essential to enjoying the day.

Music is life!

And since the selection of music extensions available for Chrome is changing all the time, it can be easy to miss the best ones coming onto the scene. You may not even realize how much you needed a certain one until you try it.

Drumbit

This drum machine is incredibly simple and totally addictive. All you have to do is hit a few squares and press play to get your totally unique drum loop. Save as a WAV file when you’re done, and use it in whatever other creation you’re working on.

Instant Music

This extension is for really lazy people who just want the right sort of music to play. Click the button, choose a genre and listen to tunes. It’s that easy. It will find you popular tunes that fit your choice and you just sit back and listen.

My Music Cloud

This neat service lets you store 250 songs in the cloud for free and play them using their Chrome app. You can automatically sync music from iTunes or import from Google Drive or Dropbox so the music is easily playable.

An upgrade costing €39.99/year will let you sync up to 10 devices and store unlimited tracks. This is basically the point of this app for most people: to be able to store music in Google Drive and access it on their iPhone.

AudioBox

The Audiobox app and extension combination is an excellent way to tie all your online music together. Connect your YouTube, SoundCloud, Google Drive, Box, Dropbox, and more all in the one place. Most of these services require paid accounts to connect, but paid accounts start at just $0.99/month, and also let you store files on their cloud servers.

What’s really impressive about this app is that you can create simple or smart playlists using your songs from a variety of online services. Then you can play your AudioBox playlists from any connected device (iOS and Android included).

Last.fm Scrobbler

This scrobbling extension has been around forever, but is the essential tool for people who still love tracking their music listening habits in Last.fm. Make sure you have it.

Deezer Control

For Deezer users, this is the ultimate extension. It gives you hotkeys, notifications and a popup for info and playback tools. There’s no web app for Deezer, so be sure to bookmark it.

Music Plus For Google Play

This is the Google Play user’s ultimate extension: notifications, a popup of information and playback tools, Last.fm scrobbling, and lyrics. Just what you need to keep the tunes coming.

Spotify Playlist Extractor

If you create a lot of playlists in Spotify, you might want to back them up in order to import them into other music players or to just keep your hard work safe. This extension makes it really easy, as you just navigate to the playlist in the web version of Spotify and click the extension button. Get your playlist as a M3U or JSON file with one more click.

Rdio2Spotify

In a similar vein to above, you might be keen to save all of your Rdio playlists to Spotify now that the service is closing down. This is the perfect tool — it’s not a Crhrome extension, but it’s a tool many of us should use quickly before it’s too late.

Songist

This is a really unique app on this list, in that it lets you play music from your own hard drive or USB. This is perfect for Chromebook users, who might have a collection of their favorite tracks on a USB they plug in occasionally.

With Songist, you can create a decent playlist for those files and listen to them using a familiar interface. This is a huge improvement on the default Chromebook tools.

Apps For Music on Chrome

There a bunch of other apps on Chrome, which basically just direct you to the web app. That said, most of these are huge sites and they are part of a Chromebook user’s essential music app collection, so be sure to get the app and also bookmark the site for everyday use.

Spotify — Spotify is one of the most popular music streaming services in the world for very good reason. It rocks. Free plans are available, and paid subscriptions start at €4.99.

Google Play Music — Google’s own web streaming service. It lets you upload 50,000 songs from your own music collection, which can be automatically or manually added as you prefer. On top of that, you can buy individual tracks or subscribe to their unlimited service for €9.99. It’s a great way to blend your old favorites with new music.

SoundCloud — SoundCloud is a platform for original works of music, and has also become popular for hosting podcasts. As a free user, your uploads are limited to 3 hours of content, and paid accounts start at €4/month.

Stitcher — Stitcher is an interesting web service that lets you piece together a playlist from talk radio, podcasts and live radio on demand. It has a neat front page that will highlight some of the most interesting stories of the day, and the hot channels of the day. If you’re into random interesting stories, this is the perfect app.

Undrtone — Undrtone is a cross-platform music discovery service, allowing you to connect your Spotify, Deezer and Soundcloud accounts. From there, you can get recommendations based on your taste, your friends and their own tastemakers. Browse trending tracks, recommended hashtags or people to get a playlist for the day.

Soundtrap — This web app is one of the hottest things in music production right now. It lets you create original music with musicians from around the world, and mix the creation just as you would in Audacity — but it’s an online alternative Audacity tool. The beauty of it is that it’s a collaborative effort. If you make music, you need to try this.

Earbits Radio — This is a simple way to listen to free, curated, independent, ad-free music.

AccuRadio — Just about every online radio station in the world at your fingertips. The beauty of it is that they’ve created collections of stations for you, such as Christmas music, workplace moods music, genres and more featured collections.

PocketCaster — This unofficial Chrome app leads to the official PocketCasts web app, which is an awesome way to listen to your favorite podcasts on the web. And for a one-time fee of $9 you can sync your podcasts with your smartphone forever.

TuneIn — The unofficial TuneIn Chrome app takes you to the official TuneIn page, which is another fantastic directory of online radio stations and podcasts. One of the most unique things about this directory is you can get a list of local stations and podcasts in any area worldwide, talk radio stations, sports, music, language learning or pretty much whatever else you’re looking for. Children’s music, Christmas music, Folk, Disco, 80s, Classical and more. You can even organize all the stations you follow into your own folders.

What Do You Listen to?

So really, get all these music extensions and apps installed in your Chrome browser right now. You’ll never be at a loss for interesting music to listen to ever again!

What are your favorite music extensions for Chrome? Which web apps do you turn to every day? Which stations and podcasts keep you entertained the most? Tell us!

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Google AdWords Doubles Amount of Structured Information Shown on Text Ads by @mattsouthern | Dramel Notes

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Google AdWords’ structured snippet extensions have proven to be a popular feature with advertisers since launching this past Spring.

This is an additional line of information that can be shown with text ads to highlight important information for searchers — the ultimate goal being to encourage more click-throughs.

Google has now doubled the amount of structured information that can be shown with text ads, giving advertiser’s an additional line of structured information to work with.

This can be accomplished through selecting two predefined “Headers” — which serve as your structured snippets — and then customizing those headers with two sets of values. The two sets of information now have the possibility of being displayed at the same time.

As one example, this could be useful for service providers wanting to highlight their most popular services, as well as the top brands they work with.

Google reminds that each structured snippet extension is subject to its own ad auction and, like other ad extensions, may not always be shown together.

You can improve the probability of having both extensions show at the same time by providing as much information as you can. With more information the ad auction is able to better select the best combination of extensions to show to boost enhance performance.

Featured Image Credit: PlusONE / Shutterstock

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