> On Jan 29, 2018, at 7:21 PM, xavier paredes <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>  If you don’t support Chrome plugins how was I able to install boomerang for 
> gmail then?  Also, I find it odd that you would create a product for Gmail 
> that doesn’t support Chrome. Both are Google products; you would think Chrome 
> would be the best plugins to support.

Let mer see if I can help, please excuse me if I am answering at too basic a 
level. I’m going to leave out a bunch of details in this reply.

There are two components (roughly) to Gmail and its extensions like Boomerang. 

The first is the basic web service Google provides on their servers. Anyone 
with a browser can connect to their web server and view the Gmail service by 
browser to https://gmail.com <https://gmail.com/>.

The second is an extension that is installed into a specific browser on your 
machine that augments and communicates with the web service Google provides. 
Boomerang is one such example. But like any other browser extension, installing 
that extension in one browser does not provide this functionality to any other 
browser (if you install a Chrome extension that changed the word “cloud” on web 
pages to “fluffy cloud", your Firefox browser doesn’t automatically start 
changing that word too because you haven’t installed a Firefox extension).  

When you install a browser extension, that is a local installation. Even if it 
is an extension that interacts with a web service. If you install a Chrome 
extension, nothing gets installed directly on Google’s servers (even though 
both Chrome and Gmail are Google products). 

Here’s probably the key piece of info you are missing: MailPlane (and apologies 
to Lars and the gang if it sounds like I’m diminishing your hard work) is just 
another browser with some nice functionality wrapped around it. Installing a 
Chrome extension like Boomerang on your machine does not install it in 
MailPlane any more than it installs it into Firefox on your machine at the same 
time. If you start up Firefox, Boomerang will not be present.

Any extensions/additional services found in MailPlane have been manually 
installed into their custom browser environment (integrated and tested, etc) by 
the developers. At the current time, the developers do not provide 
functionality that lets users install their own extensions. (And even if they 
did, my suspicion is the the browser functionality for MailPlane is based on 
WebKit, the same engine used by Safari on your machine, so a Chrome extension 
wouldn’t be compatible).

Does that make any more sense?

      — dNb

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