

Other changes of interest to the add-on include better context menu integration a rejiggering of how the average download speed gets calculated to favor more recent downloads and support for third-party download services such as RapidShare without having to enable third-party cookies when cookies have been disabled.

HTML5 standards have yet to be finalized. HTML5 support includes both and tags, at least as far as they've been documented and integrated into the browser itself. Of course, this is the case for the vast majority of users and ought not to pose a problem.ĭownThemAll's queue control has been improved as well, with new filters available to help clear the line of in-progress and completed downloads that have been set up and DownThemAll now offers official, developer-sponsored integration with the Firefox add-on Video DownloadHelper. The media-sniffing option will discover and download audio and video embedded or linked in a Web page for you, as long as you're looking at a site on HTTP or HTTPS. This means that even if you're running in Private Browsing mode, you can run the add-on and get the increased download speeds it provides. Separately, you can also set download limits by server.įirefox's trackless browsing option receives support in DownThemAll 2.


You can now set different maximum download speeds by individual download, by server, or as a global preference. While support for Firefox 4 was essential to the add-on's continued life, the granular controls over download speeds are a welcome surprise. New in version 2 are some sweet tools for making it all happen faster. Download accelerator and manager DownThemAll gives a swift kick in the pants to Firefox's download manager, providing the browser not only with heightened downloading chops, but with an effective tool for sniffing out media content on Web pages and getting it on your hard drive quickly.
