Reviews for Tab Center Reborn
Tab Center Reborn by Mélanie Chauvel (ariasuni)
Review by mediapuck
Rated 5 out of 5
by mediapuck, 5 years agoYour extension is the sole reason that I have not abandoned FF when version 2.x came around. Although I still debated to switch browser until just now, when I read the reviews, that includes your responses .
It is not so much the stars that convinve me than you responding to questions with real answers. That tells me how serious you are with your extension.
Mozilla does not have a good track record how it treated it's extension contributors when the switch to Quantum took place. They threw quite a few incredible contributors - out like the baby with the bathwater.
Myself, I still reel with disappointments, one after another. Simply because "true" improvements are the ones that consider all aspects of the platform and also do listen to its users. Ans Mozilla still in that respect has a long way to go.
I am definitely one of those very early users that downloaded Firefox back when they started. And I am not easily discouraged either. Its just lately it simply prooves to that I may spend my teime better than always trying to find either new extension or make due with en ever growing css file, hunting for others that try to find also the same solutions.
So, Thank you for your extension. For now, I work nearly normal again with this browser. Well better said, more like 80% from where I was even just a short while ago from 71.x version, that had to be custumozed already for being intuitive to a coder and developer.
Working all day also on websites, there are certain "flows" and functions that allow me to be 100 percent effective. But every time some vital step of that workflow is gone again, it throws me back to the hunt for alternatives and more often than not, its not just the easy "find 'the' extension.
If the next major update chops the browser workflow again dramatically - and your extension does not work like it does right now I will definitely switch broser. Currently Firefox is still my primary use. But I have ported a lot of my most needed functions already over to Opera, including using the FVD Speeddial extension, which works flawlessly, despite that some say it does not. I have over 3500 dials I need in a specific order, and that dwarfet my attempts to use any of the Opera native ones.
FVD weathered all 'disaster' upgrades, more or less well. Before the switch to quantum they were very under-rated as FF extension. They jumped to finally be nearly number one for good reason.
I am hoping that your extension weatheres also in the coming future of Mozilla.
So - YES - THANK YOU for yur work.
It is not so much the stars that convinve me than you responding to questions with real answers. That tells me how serious you are with your extension.
Mozilla does not have a good track record how it treated it's extension contributors when the switch to Quantum took place. They threw quite a few incredible contributors - out like the baby with the bathwater.
Myself, I still reel with disappointments, one after another. Simply because "true" improvements are the ones that consider all aspects of the platform and also do listen to its users. Ans Mozilla still in that respect has a long way to go.
I am definitely one of those very early users that downloaded Firefox back when they started. And I am not easily discouraged either. Its just lately it simply prooves to that I may spend my teime better than always trying to find either new extension or make due with en ever growing css file, hunting for others that try to find also the same solutions.
So, Thank you for your extension. For now, I work nearly normal again with this browser. Well better said, more like 80% from where I was even just a short while ago from 71.x version, that had to be custumozed already for being intuitive to a coder and developer.
Working all day also on websites, there are certain "flows" and functions that allow me to be 100 percent effective. But every time some vital step of that workflow is gone again, it throws me back to the hunt for alternatives and more often than not, its not just the easy "find 'the' extension.
If the next major update chops the browser workflow again dramatically - and your extension does not work like it does right now I will definitely switch broser. Currently Firefox is still my primary use. But I have ported a lot of my most needed functions already over to Opera, including using the FVD Speeddial extension, which works flawlessly, despite that some say it does not. I have over 3500 dials I need in a specific order, and that dwarfet my attempts to use any of the Opera native ones.
FVD weathered all 'disaster' upgrades, more or less well. Before the switch to quantum they were very under-rated as FF extension. They jumped to finally be nearly number one for good reason.
I am hoping that your extension weatheres also in the coming future of Mozilla.
So - YES - THANK YOU for yur work.
137 reviews
- Rated 1 out of 5by Firefox user 17694439, a month ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by rain, 2 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Rodrigo, 2 months agoO "Tab Center Reborn" possui os mesmos recursos do "Tree Style Tab", com o diferencial de ter uma caixa de pesquisa para as guias, similar à extinta "Tab Center Redux", excelente.
- Rated 5 out of 5by HumanistAtypik, 3 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Matt , 5 months agoThis has been my favorite vertical tab solution for a very long time (and this review is long overdue).
How I use it: In TCR options, enable "Use current browser theme", "Compact Mode", "Favicon-only Pinned Tabs", and "Custom Stylesheet". In the stylesheet, in addition to some tweaks provided by the author (thinner scroll bar, hidden header-- see the link in the documentation), I also add "#topshadow,
#bottomshadow {
box-shadow: 0px 0px 7px 5px rgb(30, 34, 40) !important;
}" to darken the overflow shadow within the tab list. This color is very subtle and matches my favorite them, GitHub Dark Dimmed by evgnz.
Mozilla is finally working toward adding built-in options for vertical tabs, and I'll definitely be judging that implementation against this wonderful extension, as well as the great vertical tabs offered by Vivaldi. - Rated 5 out of 5by AshkanArabim, 5 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 17581597, 6 months agoThis is the best tab add-on I have ever used. It has everything you want from a vertical tab add-on, and the inline tab search feature is brilliant when you have many tabs open.
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 13783361, 7 months agothe "Notify when closing many tabs" checkbox does not work and breaks the "Close tabs before/after/close other tabs" options, causing it to simply hide the tabs from view instead of actually closing them. works great otherwise.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 14790336, 10 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 18281771, 10 months agoSuper le filtre... il faudrait pouvoir sélectionner et supprimer ...
- Rated 5 out of 5by Janos Barbero, a year agoFantastic addon, blazingly fast. Tree Style Tab was too slow and bloated, this works super fast even with 1000+ tabs!
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 18080066, a year agoJ'ai testé plusieurs extensions similaires avant de revenir constamment à celle ci car elle est simple et non bugué après une maj. Le fait de pouvoir ouvrir un onglet en double cliquant est top.
- Rated 5 out of 5by djimbough, a year agoThe best vertical tabs implementation for Firefox I have come across. Kudos to the devs. I also wish Firefox weren't dragging their feet on implementing vertical tabs natively.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Antonio Pires, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Xane123, a year agoAlthough I used Edge for a while, I returned to Firefox after hearing about Microsoft's plans to move on to Manifest v3. If there's one feature that I liked from that browser, it was its vertical tabs, which are a more efficient use of screen space.
Going back to horizontal tabs felt like a regression, but this add-on almost brought vertical tabs TO Firefox; After hiding the tab list and replacing it with the title bar, Firefox feels somewhat more like Edge, which I find pretty neat!
Edge-to-Firefox migration story aside, this add-on is a good use of Firefox's sidebar, turning it into a list of any tabs that you have open. It looks nice, adapts to your theme (including ones made using Firefox Color), and at times feels like a natural part of Firefox itself.
Like another reviewer mentioned, tabs can't be grouped with this add-on, which is sort of bad, but I didn't use tab-grouping often in Edge, so not much is lost here.
In conclusion, if you prefer tabs that are listed vertically, are coming from Microsoft Edge, or want to experiment with a new UI layout, I recommend Tab Center Reborn! I've only used it for less than a day but it's mostly exactly what I was looking for. - Rated 3 out of 5by Mattx3, a year ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Ron0x, a year agoIf you could also group tabs like in Edge this add would be perfect.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 17109960, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by chadvergilangeloo, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Karoofish, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 11803080, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by ilo Mimuki, a year ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Suhayb, a year ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by CyberCollector.A.M, a year agoIt would be nice to be able to change the color of the tabs, because some firefox themes don't do it.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Geordan, a year ago