Split Content On Your Browser

Category: Tips and Tricks    |    413 views   |   

This splits the content area of the browser window as you like.

This splits the content area of the browser window as you like. It will help you in various cases. For example, to compare multiple web pages, to show a calendar always, and so on.

There is some ways to split window.

* Choose the “Split Browser to” menu in the context menu.
* Choose the “Load in Split Browser” menu in the context menu on link.
* Click popup-button on top/bottom/left/right edges of the content area.
* Drop links, bookmarks, etc. to popup-button on top/bottom/left/right edges of the content area while dragging.

You can split browser infinitely, as many as your RAM and your screen allow. Enjoy split and split to your heart’s content!

Drag and drop is available to load links, bookmarks, and so on, into split browser. If you drag the toolbar of split browser, you can load the page in another split browser.

Split browsers can be closed by their close box. “File” > “Close All Split Browser” closes all of them at once.

You can tile all of tabs as split browsers, and, gather split browsers to tabs. If the Multiple Tab Handler ( https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/4838 ) is available, you can tile tabs with selection.

This includes tabbed browsing feature. You can open new tab in split browsers, by “New Tab” menu in the context menu in the toolbar of split browsers, or middle click links in them. (But this feature doesn’t work with TBE or TMP. They are designed for environments without multiple “tab browser” widget.)

Status of split browsers are saved, and automatically restored on the next startup.

Works with:

  • Firefox Firefox: 1.5 – 3.0a6

Lots of screen real estate is great, but sometimes the applications that use that screen may not take full advantage of the hardware you run on. Take for instance Firefox, running Firefox in maximized mode on a 1920 X 1200 screen is a huge waste. A screen that big could show up to four web pages, but you would have to manually set each window up. So along comes Split Browser, its an extension for Firefox that can literally split your Firefox into two or more sections for side by side reading. This is great for Google fans who want to run their Google Calendar and Gmail right next to each other without a goofy grease monkey script. Maybe you are writing a review on a website and you want to write in one section and browse in the other. The possibilities are endless. Whether you have an second monitor or just have one Split Browser is a must have extension for Firefox.

Here are some ways to “Split” your browser from the publisher’s website.

* Choose the “Split Browser to” menu in the context menu.
* Choose the “Load in Split Browser” menu in the context menu on link.
* Click popup-button on top/bottom/left/right edges of the content area.
* Drop links, bookmarks, etc. to popup-button on top/bottom/left/right edges of the content area while dragging.
As part of my Web Browser Guide for Bloggers series on the , I explored a lot of new Firefox Extensions to improve my blogging skills and efficiency. In the process, I discovered the Split Browser Add-on.The Firefox Extension splits the browser’s screen into two or more parts, allowing you to view one or more web pages side by side, or one on top of the other. You can split your screen in many ways.

There are many benefits to this, especially for bloggers. Of most interest is the ability to copy links and references from one page into the blog post you are writing about. Instead of switching back and forth between tabs, both web pages are visible and moving back and forth is incredibly simple.

Another advantage is that the split browser allows me to have “two screens” up, one the draft of my word press post in the Write Post panel and the other, the “preview” of my blog post, which is an interesting work-around for this annoying lack-of-feature for the recent version of word press.

The reality, however, is a little different.

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