Go to the add-on you want to install and just right click on the +Add to Firefox button and select save link as. After downloading the file just go to File>Open File and just select the extension you have downloaded work like a charm for me.
Open the addons page in a chrome browser. Then right lick on 'Add to Firefox' link and click 'Copy Link Address'. Open a new tab and Paste the same link there. Hit Enter. It will download the .xpi file.
Don't know about older versions, but in new firefox there is a setting in about:config page called browser.altClick which if set to true, will allow you to download the xpi files(or any files) without directly running it.
I currently have 1Password 6 on my mac, and have paid for it's license. It has been working great for me until recently. I constantly use it and it's safari extension. However recently I tried to install it's firefox extension, which then requested I download 1Password 7, which I did. 1Password 7 is not free however, and I can't currently afford either the upfront payment for a license, nor the recurring monthly fee for a subscription (Please don't try to convince me to upgrade now, I may in the future when I have more income if I continue to have a good experience with 1Password as I largely have until now).
The problem is that upon installing the free version of 1Password 7, It replaced not only the firefox extension, but the safari extension as well! It also replaces the menu bar widget until I manually quit 1Password 7 and reopen 1Password 6. Thus it has removed previously available functionality making it very difficult to access my passwords, practically acting as ransomware. How can I download the old version (the latest version that works with 1Password 6) of the Safari and Firefox extensions so I can continue using 1Password as normal?
1Password Version: 6.8.8, 7.2.1
Extension Version: Not Provided
OS Version: Mac OS 10.14
Sync Type: Dropbox
Referrer: forum-search:How can I download older versions of the 1Password extension?
It's too late for potatoman but the companion extension, how I refer to the extension that works with 1Password 4-7 and doesn't require a 1Password account, can always be downloaded from our "Downloads - 1Password" page. While Safari is listed as "Included with 1Password 7" to the side is a link for the 1Password 6 Safari extension in Apple's Safari Extension Gallery.
A couple of things are worth noting. Chrome extensions can only be installed via the Chrome store and they only allow the current version. The same holds true for Safari and while it is possible to download an older version of a Firefox extension I can't think of a scenario where it would be recommended.
I have seen a few people find the 1Password X extension when they needed the companion extension. We do realise two extensions generates confusion and so we do eventually want to have it where you only need one and it's always the result you find no matter where you search. We're not there yet but it is our goal.
I fear this might be a bug with firefox, as this seems to work fine on any other browser I've used. If it is not a bug, what steps need to happen to force a download (versus a display in browser) of a file that can't be displayed in the browser.
but I get a matrix screen of characters rather than a download (only on firefox). I have another file on the same page that is text-based and through the same process get a "save file box" pop-up from firefox.
I've tried using the settings in firefox to force a download e.g. "Save File", but the extension is not listed and I changed all the extensions and the selection for "other files" to "ask whether to open or save files"
Which I am unsure how to use that information, I have the latest firefox version and the above code works fine on Chrome and other browsers. There doesn't seem to be much information about "specifying a disposition of inline", at least for react.
I can also take the link directly from the api and put it in the different browsers with the same effect (outside of the react/web front end). The only one that tries to open the file is firefox, the rest download it.
The solution is going to involve changing the Content-Type (if it is wrong) and/or Content-Disposition (to specify that the resource is an attachment and so should be downloaded and not displayed inline) of the resource the URL points to.
I studied the following Help page, which seems relatively current: -pdf-extension-firefox-upgraded.html). However, it is not helpful because the extension simply does not appear at all inside Firefox (impossible to enable it via this advice if it is not there to begin with). I tried "repairing" the Acrobat DC install via that function inside Acrobat DC, which did not work. I next uninstalled Acrobat DC and reinstalled it. This also did nothing.
There appears to be no formally listed Adobe Acrobat DC extensions in the Firefox extension repository either. What is going on here? Is Adobe behind on supporting this extension? Does it still exist? Or am I having an installation or compatibility problem?
I have the same problem, and I don't think you are reading the problem correcting. There is no extension visible in firefox, so we cannot follow the steps to enable it. It simply doesn't show up at all, so it cannot be selected and enabled. Is there perhaps a place on adobe's site where the extension to be downloaded? or is it actually necessary to nuke the whole installation of Acrobat just to resurface this add-on?
Below are screenshots you requested that show the Adobe PDF Creator (and any other Adobe product) are not included in the current Firefox build add-ons, extensions (disabled or otherwise) or in the customize menu.
Please see everyone else's comments after yours. We would appreciate if Adobe would work with Firefox to provide a satisfactory security certificate (a problem with the add-on and extension in the past) and a current, working extension for its Adobe PDF creator extension for Firefox.
This doesn't work because the extension is completely missing. There is no add-on for this available in the add-on manager. There is no extension to enable because it simply is not there. There's no add-on to add from Firefox's extensions, either, even when I do a search for it. I cannot enable something that isn't there to begin with, i.e., there is nothing there to enable. There is nothing there to drag anywhere. It is simply not there at all. Anywhere.
I have the same issue. The Adobe Extension simply is no where in Firefox to choose. You guys need to post the extension file on the site so we could point Firefox to it. That is the only way this will be resolved. I am using Adobe 2017 and when I changed my computer the extension simply does not appear in FireFox.
After updating Firefox from v94 to v95, the Acrobat DC extension disappeared from my browser. After following your clear instructions, it now works perfectly. Thank you very much for posting the solution.
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