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My quest to buy Waves plugins

19 June 2018 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

In my previous Bundles of Waves plugins post, I wrote that, even though I have tried a number of Waves audio plugins over the years, I have 9 favourites:

  • H-Comp Hybrid Compressor ($179)
  • H-EQ Hybrid Equalizer ($179)
  • H-Reverb Hybrid Reverb ($349)
  • H-Delay Hybrid Delay ($179)
  • Bass Rider ($99)
  • Vocal Rider ($249)
  • L2 Ultramaximizer ($299)
  • Dorrough Stereo ($199)
  • WLM Plus Loudness Meter ($399)

Unfortunately, buying them would cost me $2,131 which is waaaaayyyyy too expensive.

The Waves website

Fortunately, Waves regularly offer deals on its website. On 19 April 2017, I discover this incredible deal there. All prices are slashed:

My favoured 9 plugins would today cost $420.05 (Rs 14,865) instead of $2131 (regular price). This is a massive 80% discount!!! But it is still a bit expensive for me. I decided to wait a bit.

Cyber Monday Deal

On 29 November 2017, I found out about the massive Cyber Monday Deal, still on Waves’ website:

There is now a phenomenal discount of $1807.75 off the regular price. My 9 favorites today only cost $323.25 (Rs 11298.23). Still a bit expensive. Skipped again.

Plugin Discounts

On 19 June 2018, I finally discover that a lot of people buy Waves plugins from Plugin Discounts which offers some of the best deals on the planet. I take the decision to always use such websites in the future and to only buy plugins if they are less or equal to $29 each. Here is what I finally bought today:

I got the Waves WLM Plus Loudness Meter at $24.36 (94% discount, which is amazing!), the Waves Dorrough Stereo Meter at $32.76 (which is more than $29 I know but which I had to get in my first Waves purchase ever because I am so reliant on it when mixing, 84% discount) and the Waves H-Series consisting of H-Reverb, H-Delay, H-EQ and H-Comp. The bundle cost me $72.07 which means that each individual plugin is less than $29 and the discount is a staggering 92%. In total, I paid $129.19 (Rs 4515.45) for 6 plugins.

What remains now is the L2 Ultramaximizer which I use on my main bus to make sure that there is no clipping. Right now, I am quite far from making final mixes or mastering so I can wait a bit for the L2 to become available, either on Waves’ website or at Plugin Discounts, at $29. Right now, it is available at $69 which is too much.

As for Vocal and Bass Rider, I can wait as I am not recording vocals or bass these days. Only electronic sounds, baby ;-)

The remaining plugins

On 24 Jun 2018, I got Center at $24.36 on Plugin Discounts.

On 28 Jun 2018, I got Vocal Rider at $29 on Waves’ website. It was slightly cheaper on Plugin Discounts but, for some reason, my credit card was not working there.

On 04 Jul 2018, I got Bass Rider and the SSL G-Master Buss Compressor (which I didn’t intend to buy but which is excellent to glue a mix) on Waves’ website. Each cost $29 but with the Waves discount for the 2nd plugin it was more like $25.38 each.

On 11 Jul 2018 after reading a lot, I bought Waves Tune at $24.36 on Plugin Discounts. I have used it only once since to tune Anya’s and Kyan’s voices while they were singing Where’s the Revolution by Depeche Mode and it is a fantastic plugin. It is transparent and makes voices twice better.

On 16 Jul 2018, I got the Vitamin Sonic Enhancer and took the plunge for the Scheps Omni Channel. Both costs $29 but more like $25.38 with the discount on Waves’ website. I had no intention to get a channel strip. After all, I already own a compressor and an EQ. But I only had to use the Omni Channel once to realise how good it was. I used it to tame a bassline (albeit with Bass Rider before it) and the resulting sound was amazingly good. The only plugin I intend to buy now is the L2 Ultramaximizer.

On 26 Jul 2018, I finally bought the L2 Ultramaximizer on the Waves website at $29.00. I’m done.

Am I? Two days later, on 28 Jul 2018, I got the F6 Floating-Band Dynamic EQ on Waves website at $21.75. A dynamic EQ is an EQ where cut or boost are made only if a signal crosses a certain threshold. One example of use is when trying to EQ a harsh cymbal. If a normal EQ is used, then high frequencies will be cut throughout. With a dynamic EQ, the cut will be made when the cymbal is really loud (and this happens only momentarily). A dynamic EQ is similar to a multiband compressor but it is much easier to use. That’s why I didn’t get a C6…

On 28 Oct 2018, I took the plunge and got Brauer Motion, a circular stereo auto-panner designed with Michael Brauer who mixes Coldplay. It cost $26.91. It’s a fun plugin which makes sounds move in space. I intend to use it on some sounds from the past (sampled from my Kawai K4 maybe) which lack movement.

On 24 Nov 2018, Waves gave me Sibilance for free. It’s a vocal de-esser with excellent quality.

24 Jan 2019 is going to remain a great day. I finally took the plunge and purchased the four CLA Classic Compressors. I paid $69 and I got the CLA-2A Compressor / Limiter, the CLA-3A Compressor / Limiter and the CLA-76 Compressor / Limiter (in two variants, Blacky and Bluey). These four compressors are considered true classics by audio engineers the world over. In the coming months, I intend to learn how to use them properly.

On 21 Jun 2019, I purchased Bass Fingers, a virtual instrument emulating a bass guitar being played with the finger (instead of being slapped). Cost me $24.50 and it’s fantastic to lay down authentic and realistic-sounding basslines. I could never play a bass guitar but, with Bass Fingers, I can try being one with my master keyboard.

On 30 Nov 2019, I got Berzerk Distortion for free and it’s dope. With it, I can have wild, deranged, creative distortion. To be honest, I am not much of a distortion guy but, when needed, it sure comes handy.

On 09 Dec 2019, I upgraded my Dorrough Stereo to Dorrough Surround (which includes Dorrough Stereo) for free. Having more plugins without having to pay is nice, even though I can’t see myself mixing in surround soon. I’m still struggling in stereo.

On 2 April 2020, thanks to the fact that I already owned the SSL G-Master Buss Compressor, Waves allowed me to upgrade to the SSL 4000 Collection bundle for just $74. This means that I now own the SSL E-Channel, the SSL G-Channel and the SSL G-Equalizer as well. All of them are plugins which have earned rave reviews for nearly perfectly emulating a real SSL 4000 console (which, in addition to costing an arm and a leg, is used by the very best including Chris Lord-Alge).

On 9 April 2020, I bought the LoAir subharmonic generator plugin (it has two adjustable low-frequency processors for shaping the ultra-low end) and the J37 tape saturation plugin (which emulates the very machine used to record many of the greatest masterpieces in modern music at Abbey Road Studios). I became eligible for one free plugin and I opted for the API 550A and API 550B EQ. The idea was for me to be able to use the CLA compressors together with the API EQs and get a kind of vintage channel strip.

On 15 July 2020, I bought the JJP Analog Legends bundle which came with Vari-Mu compressors based on the world famous Fairchild 660 (mono) and 670 (stereo), namely the PuigChild 660 Compressor and the PuigChild 670 Compressor. The bundle also features emulations of two legendary Pultec EQs in the form of the PuigTec EQP-1A EQ (for low and high frequencies) and the PuigTec MEQ-5 EQ (more suited for mid frequencies e.g. vocals). All these plugins essentially colour the signal. This allowed me to choose a free plugin and I opted for the NLS Non-Linear Summer which, in essence, allows me to emulate real analog consoles within my DAW.

On 3 September 2020, I got Manny Marroquin Tone Shaper and MaxxVolume for free from Waves. I wasn’t planning to ever buy them but their online reviews are not bad at all. The Marroquin Tone Shaper is a kind of multiband compressor while MaxxVolume is a very complete compressor great for levelling vocals for example.

On 15 September 2020, I took the plunge and bought the Scheps 73 pre-amp/EQ and the API 2500 compressor. The Scheps 73 models the famous Neve 1073 so favoured by producers. It is generally used when tracking (i.e. recording) and I intend to use it to record vocals, guitars and, yes, the Mauritian ravanne. This will change my workflow as I tend to record dry but I want to try. The API 2500 is a VCA compressor which is world famous for its versatility. I got it because I want to understand the API philosophy. Interestingly, because of these two purchases, I could choose a plugin for free and I got the API 560 10-Band graphic equalizer. With the API 550 I already had, my API collection is complete.

On 21 September 2020, I got OneKnob Wetter for free from Waves. It’s a reverb plugin with only one knob (hence the name!)

On 6 October 2020, I got OneKnob Phatter for free from Waves. It’s an EQ for bass with only one knob (hence the name!)

On 7 October 2020, I took the plunge and got Reel ADT. As explained by Waves themselves: “is the first plugin to successfully emulate Abbey Road Studios’ pioneering process of Artificial Double Tracking. The effect that would become an integral part of Abbey Road’s signature sound was initially created at the famed studios in the 1960s to meet the needs of some very special clients: The Beatles.” On the same day, I used Real ADT to do a new mix of Anya and Kyan singing Where’s The Revolution by Depeche Mode and I (and they) liked the result. Pity that they have not given me the “right” to put the mix online…

On 25 Oct 2020, I got OneKnob Louder for free. I don’t intend to use it.

On 01 Nov 2020, I obtained the IR-L Convolution Reverb for free and I found out that Waves gives a 4.8Gb convolution reverb library for free. I downloaded it and, lo and behold, it’s amazing.

On 16 Nov 2020, I obtained the dbx® 160 Compressor / Limiter for free.

On 30 Nov 2020, I decided to invest in Abbey Road reverbs and the best Renaissance plugins. I purchased Abbey Road Reverb Plates and got Abbey Road Chambers for free. I also purchased Renaissance Vox (which is a beast of a compressor despite the name) and got Renaissance Equalizer for free.

On 06 Apr 2021, I upgraded the IR-L Convolution Reverb which I got for free to the IR360 Convolution Reverb which works in surround mode. Of course, I do not do surround but what’s nice is that the IR1 Convolution Reverb is included in the deal. The IR1 is an upgrade on the IR-L. For example, when using the IR1, the RT60 decay time can be adjusted both positively and negatively over a 4:1 range.

On 03 May 2021, I obtained the Codex Wavetable Synth for free courtesy of Beat Magazin from Germany. My synth background is digital (think Roland D-50 or the Kawai K4) and, of course, analog (think the Roland Jupiter-8 or the Roland Juno-106) and wavetable synthesis is something I find quite intriguing. Of course, I know that Xfer Records Serum is considered to be the best but, having spent some time with Codex, I have to say that I am quite impressed. The fact that it is so easy to import samples in it makes it even more impressive. I love adding colour to my sound palette.

On 18 May 2021, I purchased the Flow Motion FM Synth as I wanted to add modern FM synthesis to my palette. I already had Dexed, the free DX7 emulator but I wanted something more for the 2020s. I also purchased the VU Meter as I am always keen on having good metering. And, as a result of these two purchases, I selected the three MDMX Distortion Modules for free and, as I already own Berzerk, I also get MultiMod Rack for free.

On 12 September 2021, I decided to get the Waves Update Plan for all my Waves plugins still in Version 10 and 11. I needed to have all of the plugins in Version 12 (12.7 to be more precise) so that they work on the new M1 Mac mini I have just purchased. Fortunately, there was a nice sale going on and I managed to grab Bass Slapper, Infected Mushroom Pusher, Kaleidoscopes, MetaFilter and S1 Stereo Imager for free. The idea, apart from the Bass Slapper, is to have effect plugins to get really creative (and modern) during the mixing process. I really need to learn how to use all of them, including the ones I had before such as Berzerk Distortion, Brauer Motion, MDMX Distortion Modules, MultiMod Rack, etc.

On 10 November 2021, only two months after my last WUP, I decided to do a WUP again (Waves is getting a lot of money from me lately…) The reason is that the latest V13 version of Waves plugins work natively on Apple M1 processors now and, in the medium term, I would like to transition to ARM entirely (Reaper, Roland Cloud synths, Waves plugins and the other plugins I use on a regular basis). This is going to take a few months but I expect the transition to happen by March 2022. This means that, in any case, I would have had to upgrade all my V12 plugins to V13. I chose to do it now because Waves was offering a 25% discount and, of course, I got another $20 off this reduced price thanks to everyPlugin. All my Waves plugins are now V13 and ARM (Apple M1) native.

On 15 November 2021, I got a wonderful surprise: Waves released the SSL EV2 Channel, an improved successor of the SSL E-Channel, and I got it for free because I owned the SSL 4000 Collection bundle (in addition to the API Collection, the CLA Classic Compressors, the H-Series and the JJP Analog Legends).

On 26 November 2021, during Black Friday, I decided to purchase three vocal plugins which have been on my radar for quite some time: Waves Tune Real-Time, Vocal Bender and OVox Vocal ReSynthesis. Got the three of them at their lowest price ever and, even though I applied a discount voucher which I already had from a previous purchase, still managed to get a free plugin. I chose the PRS SuperModels guitar amp simulations, namely Archon, Dallas and V9.

On 1st December 2021, because of the Cyber Monday Sale i.e. Buy 2, Get 2 Free, I decided to purchase the new Retro Fi and one of the cheapest Waves plugins, OneKnob Filter, which I have been wanting for some time now in order to automate some nice filter sweep across some of my tracks. This allowed me to choose two plugins from a decent selection and I got Torque and Renaissance Bass. I had Renaissance Bass in my wish list for some time now and I got it because, well, it is one of the best plugins ever to create harmonics for bass. Now, this might seem counterintuitive because bass is all about low frequencies and harmonics are higher frequencies but it so happens that people use bad speakers now (their phones, laptops and Bluetooth speakers) and these cannot reproduce bass. It is therefore important to give an illusion of bass, thereby creating harmonics above the fundamental. Torque, on its part, will allow me to tune the drum samples which I am going to use more frequently now. My latest tracks have all featured sampled drums and I am sure that tuning the kick and the snare will come in handy.

On 15 February 2022, Waves came out with a free plugin called COSMOS Sample Finder. As I had many samples which I had collected over the years, I got the plugin. But I also decided to purchase the new CR8 Creative Sampler because, well, COSMOS integrates seamlessly with it. Of course, I already had other samplers, most notably TAL Sampler, but CR8 looks easy to use and, sometimes, easy is good.

On 26 March 2022, I purchased CLA Vocals, one plugin which I had been keen to get for some time now. It was being sold for $24.99 which is its lowest price ever. I am looking forward to having more vocals in my music and CLA Vocals is very highly regarded. In fact, it is considered to be one of the best Waves plugins.

On 5 April 2022, I got Trans-X for free courtesy of Attack Magazine. It is a transient wave shaper similar to Torque (which I already have) and Smack Attack (which I might get one day if it become cheap). I also have the SPL Transient Designer Plus which I used in the past to tame a ravann recording I made and which worked really well.

On 14 April 2022, due to all Abbey Road plugins being sold for $29.99 each, I took the courage to get two plugins from my wish list: the Abbey Road TG Mastering Chain and the EMI TG12345 Channel Strip. This allowed me to obtain the last item on my wish list, the Smack Attack transient shaper, for free.

On 25 May, after my brother-in-law convinced me to give Nx technology a try (aka mixing using headphones as if you were in a world-class studio) and, benefiting from Memorial Day Sale, I got (Nx) Abbey Road Studio 3 and Nx Ocean Way Nashville at $29.99 each. I have to say that Nx is amazing and my mixes are way better now. And, in addition, I got to choose two plugins for free and I got the NS1 Noise Suppressor and the Scheps Parallel Particles.

On 7 June 2022, I bought Clarity Vx at $29.99 during a Flash sale. Interestingly, it’s the only V13 Waves plugin which is not yet M1 native but, according to Waves, this is being worked on. The reviews online are very positive and I’m looking forward to podcasting / videocasting more in the (near) future. I expect that I’ll use Vx and, maybe, NS1 quite a lot.

On 20 August 2022, I bought the new Waves Harmony plugin at $29.99 to create vocal harmonies. It was being sold at a special introductory price and I got an additional $10 off as I had the OVox plugin. I really wanted to get the mighty Renaissance Compressor for free so I also purchased the OneKnob Pumper at a discounted price of $23.99. I have watched a few videos of the Pumper in use and it’s dead easy to get that dance-floor pumping effect with it. I definitely use it in my own music.

On 6 September 2022, during the Labour Day Sale where most plugins were being sold for $29.99, I got a $10 voucher which I used to purchase the Abbey Road Saturator for $19.99 instead of the regular $199. I have a large collection of saturators now and I will need to learn how to use them correctly when mixing.

On 15 September 2022, on the day Kyan turned 18, I bought the Abbey Road RS124 Compressor. It was the last plugin in my wish list and I managed to get it at $24.99 thanks to yet another $10 voucher I had because I had answered to a survey on the COSMOS Sample Finder.

On 15 November 2022, I got an email from Waves stating that the Renaissance Maxx bundle was being sold at its lowest price ever (at $39.99). Because I already owned a few Renaissance plugins, I managed to snatch the bundle at $29 and I got Renaissance Axx, Renaissance Channel, Renaissance DeEsser and Renaissance Reverb. I spend a lot of time watching music production videos on YouTube and it is obvious that these plugins are go-to plugins for many of the top producers. So it is not a bad idea to own and know them.

On 25 November 2022 (Black Friday), I got Lil Tube from free from Waves. It is the first saturation plugin in a new series of plugins called Magma. Must be some kind of new algorithm which Waves is now using.

On 28 November 2022 (Cyber Monday), I purchased BB Tubes, a new plugin released on that day by Waves to add saturation and distortion to a signal. It was being sold at $24.99 instead of its regular price (as from the next day) of $149.00. The reviews online were very positive and, on the webpage of the plugin, top producers such as Tony Maserati, Rob Kinelski, Greg Wells, Dave Pensado, Andrew Scheps, Dave Darlington, Maria Elisa Ayerbe, Junior Sanchez and so many others were raving about it. This must really be a special plugin and I am really keen to use it.

On 17 July 2023, Waves upgraded one of its best plugins, Scheps Omni Channel, to version 2 with added functionality. I got Scheps Omni Channel 2 for free as I already owned the previous version. That’s cool. Interestingly, many people consider the Scheps Omni Channel the best plugin Waves has ever made and I remembered using it for some tracks in the past. I need to give it a go again but I have so many channel strips these days…

And, speaking of channel strips, on 21 October 2023, I got Kramer HLS Channel for free courtesy of being a member of the Gearspace forum. Not bad.

On 5 November 2023, after having used the Magma BB Tube saturator to excellent effect on my latest album, Forth, I decided to purchase the Magma Tube Channel Strip at $19.99 instead of the normal price of $149 thanks to an Early Black Friday Deal.

On 24 November 2023, on the occasion of Black Friday, I obtained Silk Vocal for free. It is normally sold at $79.

On 24 Mars 2024, after a lot of thoughts, I decided to purchase CLA Epic. It is the complete set of delays & reverbs used by Chris Lord-Alge when he mixes. There are four delays: tape, throw, slap and crowd, and four reverbs: plate, room, hall and space. It looks like these were modelled on specific outboard effects CLA uses and the individual settings come from him. I am purchasing CLA Epic because I have been trying to simulate CLA’s process in Reaper but life it too short and it’s so much easier doing it with Epic. And I am also looking forward to understanding how the whole system works (and sounds).

On 31 October 2024, as a subscriber of the Bedroom Producers Blog, I managed to obtain V-Comp, a Neve 2254-type analog-modeled compressor, for free. It is normally sold at $149.

On 29 November 2024, on the occasion of Black Friday, I obtained the IDX Intelligent Dynamics plugin for free. It is normally sold at $79.

On 16 February 2025, I managed to get TrueVerb for free instead of having to pay $99. It was a gift for Kontaktina subscribers. TrueVerb is an old Waves plugin made in 2008. Since then, reverbs have become so much better. Some people still really like TrueVerb, not as a reverb, but to create early reflections. This seems interesting.

On 22 April 2025, I became aware of the Waves Free Plugin Pack which has nine free plugins. Because I already had three of them, I “only” got six plugins: AudioTrack (normally sold at $79), GTR Solo ($49), IR-Live Convolution Reverb ($129), StudioVerse Audio Effects (free), StudioVerse Instruments (free) and V-EQ3 ($129). I’m intrigued by IR-Live as I already own IR-L and IR1. I am also looking forward to enjoy the Neve EQ, V-EQ3. I already have the corresponding Neve compressor, the V-Comp.

On Black Friday on 28 November 2025, I got Magma StressBox for free instead of the normal price of $79. It is an easy to use plugin which either acts as a compressor or an expander.

On 19 January 2026, Waves gave Curves Resolve for free during 48 hours, instead of the normal price of $79. As explained by Waves, “Curves Resolve provides an intelligent way of solving conflicts between multiple tracks in your mix. It processes one track by listening to another, carving space only when and where there’s a clash.”

Conclusion

Now that I think of it, this allows me to have multiple setups for mixing and mastering:

  • one based on the Abbey Road plugins,
  • one based on SSL plugins,
  • one based on Neve plugins,
  • one based on API plugins,
  • one based on the CLA compressors,
  • one based on the Pultec EQ and Fairchild compressor,
  • one based on the Renaissance plugins,
  • one based on the Scheps Omni Channel, etc.

And, of course, with the NLS Non-Linear Summer, I now have the SSL 4000G of Mark “Spike” Stent, the EMI TG12345 Mk 4 desk owned by Mike Hedges or the Neve 5116 console custom-made for Yoad Nevo.

And I can now record through the Scheps 73… And, of course, on my master bus, I can have the Puigtec and the Puigchild, not to mention the SSL Buss Compressor.

It’s the same for composing. I do now have a number of Waves instruments (Bass Fingers, Bass Slapper, Codex Wavetable Synth, Flow Motion FM Synth and OVox Vocal ReSynthesis) which open a world of possibilities for me.

I’m delighted with my Waves collection. The idea is not to recreate, ahem, reality but to understand how professional musicians and producers work with iconic equipment as well as equipment which push the limit of what is doable today on a computer.

All in all, I legally own more than 90 Waves plugins now. I started in 2018 and it’s now 2023. I’m done I think (ha, ha, ha!). Sure, I invested a lot of money over the years but it’s a good investment on myself.

I really want to understand, learn and enjoy.

Filed Under: Apple, Music, Technology, Web

We all had a lot of fun watching Powerless

29 May 2018 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

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On our trip to Greece and Turkey and back, Christina and I discovered Powerless on our Turkish Airlines flight, a TV series which aired on NBC from 2 February to 20 April 2017 and which was cancelled shortly after.

The story is as follows:

Powerless takes place in the DC Universe and follows the adventures of Emily Locke as Director of Research & Development at Wayne Security, a subsidiary of Wayne Enterprises based in Charm City, that specializes in products for ordinary humans who are poised to be victims of the battles between superheroes and supervillains.

The storylines in the television series are not directly based on storylines in the DC comic franchise, including the Batman franchise. Rather the premise imagines stories that run parallel to the plots in the comic franchise.

In other words, it is the story of normal people who happen to live in a world where superheros exist.

On our return to Mauritius, we introduced Powerless to Anya and Kyan and I have to say that, despite its simplicity compared to, say, the Good Fight or Person of Interest, we all loved it… probably because of, precisely, its simplicity but also because Vanessa Hudgens, who portrays Emily Locke, is so fresh. Alan Tudyk, who portrays the abysmal cousin of Bruce Wayne aka Batman, is hilarious!

Give Powerless a try and tell me what you think.

Filed Under: Family, Mauritius, Movies, Web

My 20 essential Google Chrome extensions

17 March 2017 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

Google Chrome is the most popular web browser in the world. Built on Chromium, an open-source project, Chrome is now used by more than 60% of the billions of Internet users (compared to about 24% using a Microsoft browser, 12% using Firefox and 4% using Safari).

One of the reasons why Chrome is used so much is that it works extremely well with all the Google services we all depend on in these days: Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Docs, etc. Another important reason for its popularity is that Google Chrome is, well, practically an operating system (OS) which can be enhanced with extensions to make it do pretty much anything.

Here are the 20 Google Chrome extensions I would have some difficulty living without :

Productivity

GQueues Chrome Extension, GQueues for Gmail and GQueues for Google Calendar

I use GQueues to manage my tasks and to-do lists as it integrates very well with the Google ecosystem. The Chrome extension allows me to create a task very easily from anywhere while the GQueues for Gmail extension allows me to create a task in Gmail while reading a mail and both are then linked (i.e. the task needs to be done because of something read in the mail). Obviously, the Google Calendar extension integrates GQueues with Google Calendar.

Toggl Track

This extension puts a timer in Chrome and allows me to easily track the time I spend on various activities and making sure the data is safely stored in my Toggl account.

Pomodoro Timer

This simple yet powerful extension helps you stay focused, reduce procrastination, and achieve your goals through structured work and rest cycles.

Checker Plus for Gmail

I use four Google mail accounts and this extension notifies me whenever a mail comes. I can also reply, forward, mark as read, archive and delete easily. One great feature is that, whenever I find an interesting webpage, I can easily share it to others (my wife, Christina, most of the time) through the extension.

Gmail Sender Icons

This extension shows sender favicons for email messages. At a glance, I can see which emails are being sent, say, by Google to me or from Noulakaz members for the matter.

Bitwarden Password Manager

For many years, I have been using LastPass to manage my hundreds of passwords but I have replaced it with the Bitwarden Password Manager because the latter is open source software and has pretty much the same capabilities as LastPass (including two-factor authentication, managing passports with full encryption, autofilling login screens, generating new passwords, apps for Chrome and Android, etc).

BookmarkHub

BookmarkHub synchronises bookmarks between different browsers. It works with Chrome, Firefox, Edge and more. It uses a GitHub gist to store the browser bookmarks for security. The synchronisation is initiated manually and this is good because it prevents mistakes from happening.

Days Until (Days Countdown)

This simple extension displays the number of days until a specified date right in the toolbar. It is basically a number of days countdown. I use it to make me aware of the next big event coming. The first time I used it was when we were planning our Europe Tour in 2023.

Google Docs Offline

No network connection? No problem! With Google Docs Offline, you can access Google Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Drive without connecting to the Internet.

Learning / Sharing

Readwise

The Readwise extension syncs my Kindle and Instapaper highlights with the Readwise service which then allows me to review them daily. Readwise makes it easy to revisit the best parts of what I have read.

Readwise Highlighter

Readwise Reader has become the app which I use to read saved articles and highlight them. This extension can save articles to Reader and all highlights made will be synced with the Readwise ecosystem.

Readwise Exporter

The Readwise Exporter extension syncs all my Readwise highlights to note-taking apps such as Obsidian, Notion and Roam, the latter which I currently use. I now have in Obsidian all my Kindle and Instapaper highlights, thousands of them!

Archive Page

This is a simple one-click button to archive web pages on archive.today (or archive.ph), a time capsule for the internet. With a single click, I can ensure that important pages remain accessible, even if the originals are altered or removed. This extension makes the Internet more open.

Just Read

Web designers are sometimes crazy and create web pages which are basically impossible to read. This is also sometimes the case for old pages when CSS / styling was still in its infancy. Just Read changes the layout of the web page to someone much easier to read.

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

AI Exporter

An all-in-one AI chat management and export tool which exports ChatGPT, DeepSeek, Gemini, Grok chats to PDF, MarkDown, text or an image.

ChatGPT Timestamp

This is a simple extension which displays the date and time of ChatGPT messages in any conversation including all questions asked and replies made. The extension gets these dates and times from the conversation itself. The information is embedded but, for some reason, is not shown.

GoFullPage

This extension is a full page screen capture tool for any webpage. It capture a screenshot or a PDF of the current page in Chrome in its entirety and quite reliably. I use it to capture my chats in ChatGPT or Gemini for example and export everything in PDF format for archival.

Multimedia / Design

Flickr Fixr

I have been using Flickr since 2005 and I have more than 30,000 photos, hundreds of albums and, probably, thousands of tags in it. I intend to continue to use Flickr for at least a few additional years. This extension makes Flickr easier to navigate and use. Hopefully, the new owners of Flickr will revamp the UI soon so as to make this extension redundant.

Reddit Enhancement Suite

I am a big fan of Reddit and RES makes the website beautiful and adds a lot of new functionality to facilitate the life of power users.

Utility

Auto Tab Discard

This is a lightweight extension that suspends inactive tabs, helping to conserve RAM and battery life. Unlike the The Great Suspender extension which I used before, this extension uses the native method for discarding tabs, which means that even if the extension is removed or the browser crashes, the browser will automatically restore everything when launched again.

Don’t Fuck With Paste

Some websites disable paste and this pisses me off. I generally have very long and complex passwords which I manage with LastPass and the worst thing for me is a website which does not allow me to paste a password from LastPass. This extension takes care to make life sane again for me.

Open pop-up as tab

There is one Internet Banking website in Mauritius which insists opening a new window when one successfully logs in. This tiny extension forces Chrome to open new tabs instead of pop-up windows and this preserves my sanity.

History Trends Unlimited

I spend a lot of time in Chrome and this plugin allows me to see which websites I have spent a lot of time on, on which day, at which hour, etc. It’s a very good statistics extension.

HTTP Indicator

HTTP was invented by Tim Berners-Lee in 1991 and since then new protocols have emerged, most notably HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 (QUIC). This extension graphically shows what protocol a web site is using and, while not essential for life, is interesting for geeks.

Smart HTTPS

HTTPS Everywhere works great but uses too much memory (hundreds of megabytes!). One of the reasons is that it includes a very large list of websites which respond to HTTPS (a whitelist basically) and, as you can imagine, this list is always growing in size. I have decided to replace it with Smart HTTPS which works differently but produces the same results. Whenever one goes on a website, Smart HTTPS tries to use HTTPS and, in case this does not work, falls back to HTTP. And it keeps a whitelist of only 50 entries (the 50 last websites visited which covers most of the websites one generally uses).

uBlacklist

Used to prevents sites I specify manually from appearing in Google Search results. I use Google Search extensively and, in the long run, I would like to get rid of all these dubious websites which only copy / steal content from elsewhere.

uBlock Origin Lite

This is a permission-less content blocker and, consequently, fully compatible with the latest incarnations of Google Chrome. It blocks ads, trackers, miners and more. Unlike its big brother, uBlock Origin, this lite version is Manifest V3-based.

Chrome Development Tools (DevTools)

This is not an extension as it is a standard part of Google Chrome but I had to mention it. DevTools, which I only use at 10% of what it can do, allows me to examine the DOM of the web page I am on, inspect the various elements, dynamically change CSS styling, remove frames and tags (e.g. ads) and execute Javascript snippets. It is an essential tool for web geeks.

Google Chrome is formidable. But the right combination of extensions has the potential to make it 10 times more formidable.

Try some and enjoy!

Update history

28 March 2017: Added uBlock Origin. Removed uMatrix.

12 August 2017: Added Smart HTTPS. Removed HTTPS Everywhere (it needs too much RAM).

14 August 2018: added Bitly, Gmail Quick Links, Gmail Sender Icons, Google Play Last.fm Scrobbler, Ink for Google and Just Not Sorry. Removed Google Keep extension, Context and Stylish.

20 March 2019: Added The Great Suspender. Removed StockBlocker and Postman.

30 April 2019: Removed Ink for Google (most of the Google services look good enough and I was having an issue with the font weight used for Gmail which prevented me from seeing which emails I had already read and which ones were unread).

31 May 2019: Added Bitwarden. Removed LastPass (I like open source software more).

6 April 2020: Added Google Docs Offline, Instapaper, Readwise and Window Resizer. Removed Desktop Notifications for Android. Also removed all descriptions of the extensions which I have stopped using and which were just struck out.

20 April 2020: Removed Just Not Sorry as it is buggy and prevents Gmail from working properly (paste is done twice and cannot send an email!). It was last updated on 14 February 2020. I really hope that the author will update it soon as, when it worked, I felt it was a fantastic extension that warns you when you write emails using words which undermine your message. For example, when you write “I think that it should be red”, the plugin urges you to write “It should be red”. It’s the plugin for alpha males :-)

4 July 2020: I have replaced History Trends (which stopped working with the latest Chrome) with History Trends Unlimited by the same author.

23 August 2020: Added cookies.txt, Redirect AMP to HTML, ClearURLs and Momentum as extensions. Also added a Multimedia / Design section.

23 September 2020: Added Readwise Exporter.

21 October 2020: Replaced HTTP/2 and SPDY indicator by HTTP Indicator. The reason is that the original extension has not been updated since 2016 and uses a deprecated API. The new extension is open source software.

4 February 2021: Replaced The Great Suspender by The Marvellous Suspender as it seems that the former now contains some kind of malware.

20 January 2022: I have stopped using Momentum, which is an extension which replaces the default new tab page with a personal dashboard featuring a beautiful photo, weather, quotes and a mantra because, well, since getting a 4K monitor, the photos had become less beautiful and, as a result, the page less inspiring… The replacement is simply the default Google page but with a landscape photo which changes every day. Of course, I lose the quote and the mantra but that’s fine.

20 March 2022: Removed Google Play Last.fm Scrobbler as Google Play Music is no more. Actually, I removed the extension some time back but I forgot to update this post. Added Flickr Fixr to make Flickr more powerful.

20 August 2022: Removed One Window as the extension does not exist anymore. This extension made sure that any new window or popup will result in just a new tab in the current window. I only used it sparingly as only a few websites open pop-ups now (looking at you MCB Internet Banking!). I have also removed cookies.txt which is an extension to export cookies for any domain into a legacy file format compatible with youtube-dl, wget, curl, aria2 and similar. I think I only used it once and it does not exist anymore. I have added uBlacklist which, in the long run, will allow me to get rid of all these dubious websites which only copy / steal content from elsewhere in Google Search results.

1 October 2022: Added Readwise Highlighter.

1 May 2023: Removed the Instapaper extension. I have moved to Readwise to save posts to read (and to highlight) later. Added the Days Until (Days Countdown) and the Disable Extensions Temporarily extensions.

5 March 2025: Google Chrome now mandates that extensions comply with Manifest V3 which is the latest version of the extensions platform. A number of changes have been made to the available APIs and new features added. As a consequence, a number of extensions have stopped working, will soon stop working or will be removed from the Chrome store for extensions. Therefore, I have removed a few extensions which I do not use anymore as well as replace some by extensions which at Manifest V3-compatible.

I removed the Gmail Quick Links extension. I used it in the past to create labels to quickly see my unread emails or filter the emails in my inbox so that I can only see emails sent by others (as opposed to emails that I send to myself when I stumble upon something interesting). But the extension is deprecated now and it does not look that labels in Gmail work all the time.

I also removed Disable Extensions Temporarily as this feature is now part of Google Chrome, specifically through the use of Extensions Menu Access Control as explained here and here. Disabling extensions with one click is useful when troubleshooting a problematic extension or a networking issue.

I also removed Redirect AMP to HTML which automatically redirects any Accelerated Mobile Page (AMP) pages to their regular HTML equivalent. AMP is deprecated now and most websites are not using it anymore. Therefore, there is no real need for a plugin to do the redirect. If I ever need to bookmark an old AMP page, I’ll do the redirect myself :-)

After experimenting with uMatrix, I moved to uBlock Origin. It was a simple (mostly) fire-and-forget extension and it managed to block most of the ads and trackers on the websites I currently visited without degrading their usability. Unfortunately, uBlock Origin does not work properly in the latest versions of Chrome but, fortunately, uBlock Origin Lite works great as it is a Manifest V3 extension.

I replaced the ClearURLs extension, which automatically removes tracking elements (e.g. for Google and Amazon) from URLs to help protect privacy, by the equivalent Linkumori extension which is Manifest V3-compatible. I found out about that new extension when looking at the ClearURLs issues on Github.

The Marvellous Suspender is an extension which suspends tabs which are not being used, thus liberating much needed RAM. It also manages sessions which is useful when one has a lot of tabs open and needs to quit Chrome. Unfortunately, The Marvellous Suspender is not compatible with Manifest V3 and the author is sunsetting it while advising to move to the mostly equivalent Auto Tab Discard.

10 March 2025: I removed Window Resizer which resizes the browser’s window in order to emulate various resolutions. I don’t use it at all.

25 June 2025: I removed Linkumori which is an extension automatically cleans URLs by identifying and removing tracking parameters, thereby protecting privacy. Unfortunately, it was removing much more than (apparently) strictly required and a lot of links from emails I received stopped working.

3 October 2025: I added Archive Page which is a simple one-click button to archive web pages on archive.today (or archive.ph), a time capsule for the internet.

9 October 2025: I added ChatGPT Timestamp which is a simple extension to display the date and time of ChatGPT questions and answers.

12 December 2025: I added Toggl Track which tracks the time I spend on various activities, BookmarkHub which synchronises bookmarks between different browsers, AI Exporter which exports ChatGPT, DeepSeek, Gemini, Grok chats to PDF, MarkDown, text or an image and, finally, GoFullPage which is a a full page screen capture tool which I use it to capture my chats in ChatGPT or Gemini for archival.

27 February 2026: Added Pomodoro Timer which is an extension which provides with structured work and rest cycles.

23 March 2026: Removed Buffer which, previously, allowed me to share webpages automatically to Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn at times where people are more likely to engage with them. I had been using Buffer since the Knowledge Seven days but, unfortunately, the service is severely limited now in terms of number of social media profiles. And I have also unpublished by Facebook professional page which I only created for Buffer as the latter cannot post on Facebook profiles.

I also removed Bitly which is a nice link shortening, analytics and optimisation service. I used Bitly systematically when sharing content to my social network profiles using Buffer. I didn’t use Bitly for anything else and, as I don’t have Buffer anymore, there is no reason to keep the Bitly extension.

4 May 2026: I added Open pop-up as tab which forces Chrome to open new tabs instead of pop-up windows.

In other words, I’m streamlining things.

[This post was created on 17 March 2017 and last updated on 4 May 2026.]

Filed Under: Programming, Technology, Web

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