A curated collection of browser extensions that enhance the GitHub experience with productivity tools and visual improvements.
Awesome Browser Extensions for GitHub is a curated directory of browser extensions that enhance GitHub's web interface with additional functionality. It helps developers discover tools for improved code navigation, notifications, UI customization, and workflow automation directly within their browser. The collection is community-maintained and updated daily with installation statistics and repository data.
GitHub users and developers who want to customize and improve their GitHub browsing experience through browser extensions. This includes open-source contributors, repository maintainers, and teams looking to enhance productivity on GitHub's web platform.
Developers choose this resource because it provides a centralized, vetted collection of GitHub-specific browser extensions with up-to-date metrics, saving time compared to searching through individual browser stores. The codeless contribution system makes it easy for the community to add new extensions without technical barriers.
A collection of awesome browser extensions for GitHub.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Extension usage stats and repository data are refreshed daily, providing current installation numbers and star counts to help gauge popularity and activity.
Allows community submissions via GitHub Issues without requiring pull requests or code changes, making it easy for anyone to add new extensions.
Clearly displays browser icons for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and Opera, helping users quickly identify supported extensions for their browser.
Offers an online interface with additional filtering options beyond the static GitHub list, improving discoverability based on user needs.
The list only provides basic stats like installs and stars, lacking user feedback, detailed comparisons, or security assessments, leaving trial-and-error to users.
While curated, submissions via issues mean extensions are listed without rigorous vetting for functionality, maintenance, or potential breaking changes over time.
Users must manually visit browser stores to install extensions; the directory doesn't integrate direct installation links or management tools.