"Linked Images"
From any web page containing direct links to images, this tool shows a new page containing all those images.
This is great for pages with text-only links to images. And, if you prefer to see all the big pictures associated to the small ones (thumbnails) here under, just click once on +Linked Images instead of clicking on each one and come back in between.
Bad
sample from the Artist's
page
In fact, that "+Linked Images" above is the program. To keep it, drag it or right-click (Control-click with Apple) on it to add in your internet browser's Personal Toolbar, Links, Bookmarks or Favorites. And that's it: you can now call it from a web page as if you wanted to go elsewhere.
That special link and many others are called bookmarklets from Steve Kangas' web site. He got this great idea first. His site and many others are full of them with good compatibility explanations. Before I discovered them, I've made some Windows' Internet Explorer tools that were covering more than some of the most useful ones listed here, with their sites:
Note: Normally in a page like this one, when you pass the mouse over a direct link to an image, your browser shows a .JPG name on its Status Bar at the bottom left corner. (If no file name appear, you can right-click — Control-click with Apple — on the link, choose "Copy the Shortcut" or "Copy Link Location" in the appearing menu and Paste it in the Address Bar.)
This will show all the possible #word in lime highlighting, inside the web page, plus, restore the context menus (right-clicks, Control-clicks for Apple). To hide them back, Refresh or Reload the page ("F5" or while holding down "Cmd", press "R").
Most of those #word can end the web document address to jump directly where they are. In the address, do NOT include the ending "#", ":" or "=".
In document with duplicate word, Internet Explorer goes to the first ending with "#" or ":" before checking for the first ending with "=". Other browsers prioritize the first one ending with ":", and, ignore totally all words that show an "=" ending.
For example, if you click on the "+Jump Links" above, you'll see a "#jump:" in lime highlighting appearing just in front of it. Now, after Reload/Refresh or not, if you end the Address field on top with "freeware.htm#jump" followed by the "Enter" key, your browser will go directly to the current section of this page.
It help me make links jump directly where I want to, like this one, in chart page of Yahoo!
This shows the forms' action, input names & hidden values in a web page, in lime highlighting, plus, restore the context menus (right-clicks, Control-clicks for Apple). To hide them back, Refresh or Reload the page ("F5" or while holding down "Cmd", press "R"). I just use it for curiosity or to get back my Internet Explorer's context menus.
More tools as soon as I can publish them...