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You can download it from the following link and install it manually with drag & drop in Chrome's extensions management window (chrome://extensions/)
http://ionut-botizan.net/window-resizer/
I'll let you know when it's back online in the Webstore with a comment on this thread.
Best Regards,
Ionut
EDIT
The reason it got suspended was that it didn't comply with the following:
"Ads must be presented in context with your app or clearly state which app they are bundled with. Ads must also be easily removable by either adjusting the settings or uninstalling the app(s) altogether. Ads may not simulate or impersonate system notifications or warnings."
One other thing worth mentioning:
In order for the extension to work on local HTML files, you need to open chrome://extensions/ in a new tab and enable the "Allow access to file URLs" checkbox next to the Window Resizer extension.
Hi Mark,
From your screenshot I can tell that you're using an old version of the extension. I've changed the icons in the latest release (v.1.8.0) and the one you're seeing is an old one. The popup should look something like this:
After you get the latest version, please make sure when trying to resize a window that the current tab contains a page loaded using one of the following protocols: http://, https:// or file://. When resizing the viewport, the extension will fail if the active window is a Chrome "special" page, like the "Settings", "Extensions", "Downloads" pages or anything similar.
Also, please note that the tooltip at the bottom right side of the page won't be displayed on pages like the ones mentioned above, or any of the Chrome's Webstore pages (this is a Chrome security "feature").
Best Regards,
Ionuț
The settings for phone/tablet resolutions will be implemented in a completely different way than it is right now, which will fix this problem.
I'm also thinking of doing something similar to Firefox's Ctrl+Shift+M (probably Cmd+Shift+M on Mac OS).
I completely understand why this is needed and it is the no. 1 priority.
Chrome doesn't provide a mechanism for intercepting double clicks on the extension's icon, but I have an idea on how to "hack" something. (I'm thinking I might be able to detect the time that passed since opening the drop-down until it was closed; if that's really short, like a few milliseconds, then a double-click might have occurred...)
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The reason (as noted above), was that it didn't comply with the following:
"Ads must be presented in context with your app or clearly state which app they are bundled with. Ads must also be easily removable by either adjusting the settings or uninstalling the app(s) altogether. Ads may not simulate or impersonate system notifications or warnings."
My guess (since they didn't give any details, just a quote from the ToS) is that adding a mention like "EcoLinks enabled by Window Resizer" next to the modified links would be enough (similar to the "Ads by Google" mention in Adsense).