Recently James Corbett did an episode of Corbett Report on tools for online researchers. He listed some he uses and then his site members listed more in the comments.
Here I've compiled them all together with a brief explanation. You can now find this list on the links page in it's own "Tools" section. Suggestions for additions to the list are welcome, here in the comments, or sent to modmail anytime.
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youtube-dl - comprehensive program for downloading youtube videos - terminal or GUI - with many options
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Yandex Image Search - excellent image search & reverse image search too
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convertcase - convert the case of copy/pasted text
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highlighter - extension for an online highlighter
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HTtrack or webhttrack - download and preserve entire websites
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Web to PDF - online webpage to pdf convertor
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Million Short - Million Short makes it easy to discover sites that just don't make it to the top of the search engine results for whatever reason
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Archive web pages: https://archive.ph/ or https://archive.is
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https://ricks-apps.com/osx/sitesucker/ (like Htrack for OSX)
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nsfwyoutube.com - watch age-restriced videos on youtube without signing in. Just paste nsfw in front of youtube in addressbar of video
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Bypass Paywalls - extension for Chrome, Brave, Chromium - also available for Firefox
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Open Broadcaster Software - download in-progress live streamed videos
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ArchiveBox - powerful, self-hosted internet archiving solution to collect, save, and view sites you want to preserve offline
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Wallabag - self hostable application for saving web pages: Save and classify articles. Read them later. Freely.
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Keepnote - note taking application that works on Windows, Linux, and MacOS X
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WayBack Machine Downloader - Download archived webpages from wayback machine
Sci-Hub - https://sci-hub.st/
Ever found a paper you want to read but you're no longer a student so you can't use your Uni login to get it, or maybe you've never even had that service
Example: https://www.bmj.com/content/343/bmj.d8348.full
The feminisation of nature
Access this article for 1 day for: £30 / $37 / €33 (excludes VAT)
(this paper is about turning the frogs gay - for real)
it has a DOI number
so put that into Sci-Hub and it gives you free access and a link
https://sci-hub.st/10.1136/bmj.d8348
At it has links to its sources in another DOI
doi:10.1039/B815741N
so pop that one in and
https://sci-hub.st/10.1039/B815741N
10th Anniversary Perspective: Reflections on endocrine disruption in the aquatic environment: from known knowns to unknown unknowns (and many things in between)
If you need a place to search for papers Scopus.com is good
and also Google Scholar if you have to
Piggybacking on this.
Also try libgen.is
You can download tons of books for free, and scientific papers. Fiction, non-fiction, you name it.
That's a great one, thanks!
Losing access to Papers was the worst thing about graduating!
Sci-hub button for GreaseMonkey browser extension. Automatically detects DOI: numbers on most pages and takes you directly to the sci-hub download page for that : https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/370246-sci-hub-button
Similar as a Chromium extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/sci-hub-x-now/gmmnidkpkgiohfdoenhpghbilmeeagjj?hl=en-US
Do note that due to USA/Globalist censorship, sci-hub keeps moving domains.
Keep searching for "sci-hub" working current domains to find out the current, if your mostly used goes down.
or go to /r/scihub as long as it is still there and not taken down:
https://www.reddit.com/r/scihub/
the sci hub one is russian, whats up with that? russian hackers/trolls/scammers?
Hacker in the old sense. The founder is Russian
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_Elbakyan
She is also in hiding to avoid extradition to the US
That's a good observation, because Russian things are clearly made by hackers/trolls/scammers.