Web Browsers
--
Questions
--
Followers
Top Experts
I mostly keep Google Chrome as my default browser, however, it would be particularly useful to be able to right-click a link and select the Brave browser to open links, due to its vastly superior built in Ad Blocker which does not trigger Adblocker warnings on most web sites.
Here's a visual representation of what I'd like to achieve when I right-click a link:

Anyone know if this is possible to achieve and how I could do it?
Many thanks, Andrew
Zero AI Policy
We believe in human intelligence. Our moderation policy strictly prohibits the use of LLM content in our Q&A threads.
here 10 best ones :Β Β https://blogs.systweak.com/best-context-menu-editors-for-windows/Β
can a context menu editor help you?
No. I'm familiar with context menu editors. They're used to disable menu items. I want to add one.
Example:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/open-in-firefox/lmeddoobegbaiopohmpmmobpnpjifpii






EARN REWARDS FOR ASKING, ANSWERING, AND MORE.
Earn free swag for participating on the platform.
Docs say you can add any custom right menu item to run any external script/program.

Get a FREE t-shirt when you ask your first question.
We believe in human intelligence. Our moderation policy strictly prohibits the use of LLM content in our Q&A threads.
And Open with Brave:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/open-in-brave-browser/mgmnomlncpmfgelhofilonnecmbdaoia?hl=en
The above works perfectly and is exactly what I was looking for.
No idea why I couldn't locate that one myself when I went searching so thanks much for finding it for me.

This will save a ton of time manually copying links from Chrome and pasting them into Brave.
I'm a happy camper now. π
π
Web Browsers
--
Questions
--
Followers
Top Experts
Web browsers are applications used primarily to display documents, files and media from the Internet, identified by a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) that can be a page, image, video or other file. Some browsers require the use of add-ons or extensions to safely render the information they receive; others have systems built into them to perform the same functions.