Signal pendingUnknownLow-risk permissions
Imbricalt Viewer icon

Imbricalt Viewer

Detect alt text embedded in image metadata on any website. Zero config, works with Imbricalt.

Users0Current public install base
Rating--Store average score
Reviews0Public review volume
Manifest versionV3Extension platform version
7-day growth--Net users gained this week
7-day growth rate--Relative weekly velocity
Preview

Imbricalt Viewer Media preview

5 assets
Trend

30-day user trend

Review user movement over the last 30 days.

User Growth Over Time

000002026年6月16日2026年6月17日2026年6月17日Latest: 0
Rating trend

30-day rating change

Track rating movement over time to see whether quality signals remain stable.

Not enough rating snapshots yet. More data will appear as new snapshots are collected.
Growth overview

Daily, weekly, and monthly growth

Compare 1-day, 7-day, and 30-day net growth and growth rate.

1-day growthFlat
0--
7-day growthNo data
----
30-day growthNo data
----
Technical snapshot

Version, languages, and crawl freshness

Review publication date, version, supported languages, and crawl timestamps.

Version1.0.4
ManifestV3
Size16.24KiB
Languages1English
Published
Store updated
Last crawled
English
Overview

Product summary

Review the store description, core capabilities, and common use cases.

Alt text used to be locked in a CMS. Now it lives inside the image file. The Imbricalt Viewer Chrome extension scans any webpage, detects images processed by Imbricalt, and displays their alt text as a floating label — no backend, no API, no configuration.

How It Works

Imbricalt is an AI alt text generator that embeds descriptions directly into JPEG and PNG image metadata (IPTC/XMP fields). Each processed image carries an imbricalt:processed signature inside the file itself. The Imbricalt Viewer extension reads this signature in two stages:

Stage 1 — Metadata scan. When you visit a page, the extension fetches each JPEG and PNG image and parses its embedded XMP metadata. If the imbricalt:processed signature is found, the alt text is extracted from the dc:description or Iptc4xmpCore:AltTextAccessibility field and displayed as a floating overlay near the image.

Stage 2 — Perceptual hash (Fallback). If the metadata has been stripped (for example, by image-optimisation pipelines, CDNs, or social media platforms), the extension computes a perceptual hash (pHash) of the image using the same DCT-based algorithm that runs on Imbricalt servers. This 64-bit hash is sent to the Imbricalt API, which finds the closest match via Hamming distance. Each image ever processed through Imbricalt is indexed and findable through this method.

Key Features

Reviews

Recent review snapshot

Inspect the latest comments and rating distribution.

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0