I thought probably Hands Free for Chrome would see some donations given how much it could help someone who was disabled, and given how many donations I've seen more ordinary & simple extensions receive, but I only got $10 the past 3 years, and that was a single donation from a friend who felt bad seeing it at $0.
Awesome job with the extension! I think the idea has great potential.
Judging from my five minute test drive, you could probably increase adoption if you made it 'discoverable'. It's hard to determine what to do once it's installed. Turns out, you have to click the browser action to start listening for user input. After that, you have to refer to the website to find out what commands are available. It would be great if there were on-screen suggestions of commands to voice. Using it was really frustrating and unreliable until I read the instructions on the web store page to disable 'ambient noise reduction' on macs. Showing an 'instructions' page on installation would help a lot. An instructional video would be great too.
Other nitpicks:
* I couldn't get dictation to work.
* More tab manipulation commands would be nice
* I'm not a huge fan of the link hints placement and styling
I'm actually developing my own keybinding extension like Vimium/cVim/VimFx/Surfing Keys
Late response from me, but thank you very much for the feedback.
I think adding an instructions page + video would be great, I agree.
I'm surprised you couldn't get dictation to work. That distresses me. Much time went into that. The link placement is rather tricky, and I'm not sure what type of styling would be less obtrusive and equally readable.
I'm curious if other assistive software solves this need at the OS level, or if you other similar tools are already known to the community that it would be useful for.
Windows has built-in speech control that lets you scroll and click, doesn't it?
https://www.handsfreechrome.com/
Barely any users, just around 400 or so.