Adjust playback speed for any video. Video speed controller for your videos
Super Video Speed Controller allows to increase or decrease playback speed on any web site.
Features:
🎥 Work almost everywhere
🎥 You can adjust using presets or set a custom speed as a percentage
🎥 Use shortcuts
Quick Start: Find the “Super Video Speed Controller” icon by opening the menu under the “puzzle” icon on the toolbar.
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Download and install the extension from the Google Chrome Webstore or Edge Add-ons marketplace
Steps:
Open the video in the active tab. Start playback.
Adjust using the extension’s popup:
The technology works both on large sites and on little-known ones. The coverage of the sites is 99%
You can put it as a percentage and specify the exact value (e.g. +17; -29). Unlike, for example, the Youtube player, where you can put only certain values that are offered to you.
Use the following Keyboard shortcuts:
Super Video Speed Controller for Chrome is available in Chrome Web Store
Super Video Speed Controller for Edge is available in the Edge Add-ons marketplace.
In the autumn of 2022, the technicians at (TCS) were known for two things: fixing ancient printers that ran on spite, and an uncanny ability to find software that shouldn’t exist. Their back-alley office in Seattle smelled of ozone, burnt coffee, and secrets.
“That’s not possible,” murmured her junior, Leo. “Zero kilobytes?”
The terminal closed. Lights returned. The icon turned into a harmless text file named README.txt . Inside: “Thanks for playing. Your network is clean. - J.G.”
Mira clicked. A terminal opened—not Windows, not DOS, but a black screen with green glyphs that seemed to breathe. A prompt appeared: TCS_ARCHIVE_ACCESS? Y/N In the autumn of 2022, the technicians at
Inside were not files, but timestamps. Each one tied to a major global event from the past decade—power outages, server crashes, a banking freeze in Luxembourg. Next to each was a field labeled CAUSE: REMOTE TRIGGER .
“It’s not running on the computer,” Leo realized. “It’s running on us . On every machine in the shop.”
Mrs. Gable smiled. “He always did love a puzzle.” “Zero kilobytes
Leo’s coffee mug slipped from his hand. “Mira… this is a kill switch log.”
Lead tech, Mira Yen, booted the relic. The desktop was clean except for a single icon: a gray cube labeled . No manufacturer. No date. Just a file size: 0 KB.
The final entry was dated today, 10:47 AM—five minutes from now. Target: TCS_LOCAL_GRID . Inside: “Thanks for playing
She typed Y . The screen flickered, and the shop’s lights dimmed. A folder expanded: .
She typed the only sigil that made sense: the original TCS customer code from 1995— #FIX_ANCIENT_PRINTERS .
One Tuesday, a client named Mrs. Gable brought in a tower so old its casing had turned the color of weak tea. “My late husband’s,” she whispered. “He was an engineer. Said there’s a ‘Mysterious-Box’ on the desktop. I need what’s inside.”
Desperate, Mira opened the source code hidden in the box’s properties. Amid the corruption, one line was readable: // TO DISABLE: ENTER TCS_LEGACY_SIGIL
From that day on, Technical Computer Solutions kept a new rule: never click a file named “Mysterious-Box” unless you’re willing to see the strings that hold reality together. And in 2022, that was a download too many.