Compare Chrome extensions: Scholarometer for Google Chrome TM vs HashTest - Realtime Hashtag Testing

Stats Scholarometer for Google Chrome TM Scholarometer for Google Chrome TM HashTest - Realtime Hashtag Testing HashTest - Realtime Hashtag Testing
User count 3,000+ 10,000+
Average rating 3.17 3.71
Rating count 30 14
Last updated 2015-09-27 2016-11-03
Size 407.55K 16.38K
Version 4.1.0 1.0.4
Short description
Chrome Extension for Academic Impact Analysis Find the best hashtags while you type, with real time color-based quality scores.
Full summary

Scholarometer for Google Chrome TM is the chrome extension for Scholarometer.

The tool enables authors to extract their own bibliographic data from Google Scholar, curate it, annotate it, and export it to other tools or share it. More importantly, Scholarometer computes widely adopted metrics for analyzing author impact, such as the h-index and several extensions.

Read more about Scholarometer project here: http://scholarometer.indiana.edu and more about version history here http://scholarometer.indiana.edu/download.html.

Easily discover the best and most popular hashtags to increase your reach on Social Media.

What does HashTest.io do? HashTest.io tries to help you find the best hashtags for your social media content whether it’s Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, or whatever.

Why do hashtags matter? Hashtags are essential to making sure your content reaches the correct audience. In fact, using hashtags on Twitter can increase engagement with your content by up to 40%.

Why does hashtag popularity matter? Super-popular hashtags have diminishing marginal returns: if everybody on the planet uses them, your content will be lost in the torrent. But using obscure and relatively unused hashtags is utterly useless too. So the best hashtags are the ones that are both popularly used and most likely to result in increased engagement.

So how does HashTest.io determine what hashtags are best? With some super awesome number crunching magic, analyzing tons of data, and a pinch of dragon’s blood. Obviously.

Why does HashTest.io not report on other analytics data such as likes, retweets, shares, and other things?

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