I built a custom browser extension to browse CliefNotes -- Now in ChromeWebStore!
## UPDATE ##
Hey All made some updates to the extension, full changelog below but biggest thing is it's now in the Chrome webstore as an unlisted extension! To install for firefox should be a 1 click install below, and for Chrome follow the link to the web store:
BONUS: Edge users can install extensions from the Chrome Web Store (just for you ) so you should be able to install it as well, just need to enable it because of permissions (see below).
Note on the Chrome extension: It may be disabled by default because of permissions issues so you might need to enable it by going into your extension settings, but after giving it permission it should be good to go. Chrome signing / validation also takes longer so it may be on version 0.3.1 but after it passes review should auto-update to 0.3.2
Also special thanks to who forked and added some features that I wrapped in to this release.
Things I'm hoping to add: Real links to the posts, currently it caches the data. Search functionality, and export post as .md.
## ORIGINAL POST ##
Browsing on Skool can be a bit overwhelming with it's UI (my eyes need a dark theme) and the great volume of stuff on CliefNotes makes jumping in daunting, especially if you're away for more than a day, so I wanted something that made browsing feel effortless and easier to navigate and see things and keep posts around that I wanted to dig into a bit more.
So I built a browser extension that gives me a faster, cleaner view over the same Skool feed, posts, and comments.
The catch: I don't know web code. I don't know APIs. But I've learned that knowing what I *don't* know is exactly where AI earns its keep. I know how to troubleshoot — so I can tell it what's happening, what's breaking, what information I need next — and it hands me the technical roadmap I don't have. I wasn't writing this thing so much as steering it.
The part that nearly broke me was comments. A post with over 100 replies would render only 50, and I couldn't see why — Claude almost threw in the towel but I persisted because one thing I've learned working Game Dev is that if you can see something on the screen then that data exsists somewhere, you just have to figure out where to look.
The takeway I want to flag is to think about pointing AI at your pain points, the best things to come out of using ai for me have been asking "What if?" And a lot of the amazing things people have created in here follow the same pattern.
I was in the middle of my build when I came across it and I folded some of the sorting options into the extension because I thought they were great
I built it to be shared — open source, free, and I'll keep updating as I go, genuinely open to suggestions. Only caveat is it can only do what Skool's API allows. Also I use Firefox mainly and it's easier to sign a native browser extension for firefox so you can install directly using the .xpi link in my repo, for Chrome you'll have to download the .zip and in Chrome set it to developer mode and you can sideload an unpacked extension (instructions should also be in the zip).
Oh should also mention that since it's a signed Firefox plugin, it should get updates automatically and working on that for Chrome as well.
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Roc Lee
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I built a custom browser extension to browse CliefNotes -- Now in ChromeWebStore!
Clief Notes
skool.com/cliefnotes
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