![]() ![]() Instead of interacting with every which tab, I could just open a single tab with the plugin in action there. I feel like the whole process could be easier if there was a dedicated JD addon for browsers. Maybe a new dialog could be added where now i'm not entering cookies into a box called "password", but there's instead a box called "cookies".īut also the Flag Cookies addon is a problem. Maybe "Cannot add Account because you need to enter cookies in the password box to log in"? that's intelligible The popup informing me I need cookies could be better than "Cannot add Account because Enter cookies to login". This whole experience is kind of overwhelming and kind of jank. So I didn't know where to go to put the cookies in - it took some googling (which eventually put me on the same page) until I noticed that image with the red and blue rectangles that says to put the cookies string into the password box. ![]() glazed over and skipped step 4 and the rest. This page is a little cluttered so by the time it was time to take the cookies and enter them somewhere, my eyes kind of. "Cannot add Account because Enter cookies to login"īut eventually I also got a new tab in my browser opened with a support page. I did that, and then a popup showed up with a confusing message: ![]() When I decided to log into Twitter, a dialog showed up that told me to enter the user name and password. Also the usage story of the plugin itself isn't the best. Yes, I could start a new profile just for JD logins, but that's cumbersome. I think something in this addon has some sort of issue that requires it to constantly communicate with various tabs, and maybe there's some > O(n) behavior happening there. I must add that I'm a power user so i have a lot (LOT!) of windows open, but during normal operation my browser has immediate response and is very snappy. The moment I installed it, my browser slowed down to a crawl. The tutorial requires the use of a Firefox addon called "Flag Cookies". I've tried downloading something off of Twitter today and that required my login cookies. I really like it, it seems like a great power tool that doesn't limit people in what it does. I've been using JDownloader for a while - I'm still learning it. ![]()
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