Compare Chrome extensions: GTimeReport vs ForceCORS
Stats | GTimeReport | ForceCORS |
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User count | 2,000+ | 2,000+ |
Average rating | 4.43 | 3.81 |
Rating count | 21 | 16 |
Last updated | 2013-09-13 | 2014-03-21 |
Size | 18.81K | 81.24K |
Version | 1.2.12.0 | 1.1 |
Short description | |
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Export your Google Calendar to Excel and Google Docs Spreadsheets. Create a time report from your calendars in a few clicks. | Allows forcing Cross-Origin Resource Sharing headers on any desired URL; helpful when accessing remote services from a local host. |
Full summary | |
GTimeReport is the easiest time reporting you will ever find. It generates time reports from your Google Calendar with only a few clicks. Export your calendar to Excel and Google Drive Spreadsheets. You can merge multiple calendars, and use shared calendars. It respects your time zone settings, and your calendar visibility settings. |
ForceCORS is a Google Chrome extension which allows you to selectively apply CORS Headers to any web server responses you choose. This is extremely helpful when developing a web application that makes Ajax/XHR requests. The extension requires you to specify the domains that you wish to monitor and allows you to explicitly define the headers to be added. This is preferable to completely disabling XHR security in your browser, which is a big security hole. Regarding Permissions In order to allow you to append headers to ANY arbitrary location, this extension requires access to intercept ANY web request. However, by default the extension does NOT monitor any web traffic. Only URLs you specifically whitelist will be read by the extension, and only headers that YOU specify will be appended. Note: Headers added by this extension will not appear in the DevTools "Network" panel due to a known Chrome bug: https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=258064 This extension is open source under the MIT License and can be found on GitHub: https://github.com/chrisdeely/ForceCORS |