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MeetKit - All-in-One Google Meet Toolkit

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Overview

Grid view, push-to-talk, auto admit, keyboard shortcuts and more for Google Meet. Replace 5 extensions with one.

MeetKit - All-in-One Google Meet Toolkit You just want to see everyone on the call. You're on a team standup with 12 people. Three of them are sharing updates, but you can only see the active speaker and one other tiny thumbnail. You open a new tab, search "Google Meet grid view extension," install the first one you find — and it hasn't been updated since 2023. It sort of works, until it doesn't. So you search again. And again. Now multiply that by every missing feature. Push to talk? That's another extension. Auto admit so your students aren't stuck in the waiting room? Another one. A keyboard shortcut to mute when Meet isn't even the focused window? You guessed it — another extension. Before you know it, you've got five extensions doing jobs that should be built in — half of them broken, most of them abandoned. That's the real problem. It's not just one missing feature. It's that Google Meet has been missing the same set of basic features for years, and the only available solutions are a patchwork of outdated tools that conflict with each other, request permissions they shouldn't need, and break every time Google updates the Meet UI. WHY THIS KEEPS HAPPENING Google Meet changes its internal page structure regularly. Extensions that rely on specific page elements stop working overnight. Most of the grid view and push-to-talk extensions in the Chrome Web Store were built on Manifest V2, a framework Google has been phasing out. Their developers moved on years ago. Here's what you're left with: - Grid view extensions that crash or show blank tiles after a Meet update - Push-to-talk tools that fire even when you're typing in the chat box - Auto admit scripts that miss participants because they poll too slowly - Extensions requesting full browsing history or access to all websites just to run on one page - Five separate extensions in your toolbar, each with its own popup, its own settings, its own bugs Most people just live with it. They resize their browser window, manually click "Admit" fifty times a day, and forget about keyboard shortcuts entirely. MeetKit exists because that shouldn't be necessary. WHAT THIS EXTENSION DOES MeetKit is a single, modern extension that replaces the pile of abandoned Google Meet add-ons cluttering your browser. It runs only on meet.google.com and combines grid view, push-to-talk, auto admit, and keyboard shortcuts into one lightweight tool. No spreadsheets. No configuration files. No developer tools. Just toggle switches. Here's what you get: Grid View — See every participant in equally sized tiles arranged in a responsive grid. The layout auto-calculates the right number of columns whether you have 4 people or 40. A subtle highlight shows you who's currently speaking, so you never lose track of the conversation. Push to Talk — Hold the spacebar to unmute, release to re-mute. Built for noisy environments like open offices, coffee shops, or a house with kids in the next room. Smart detection ensures it won't trigger when you're typing a message in the Meet chat — so you can type "sounds good" without accidentally broadcasting your keyboard clicks to the entire call. Auto Admit — Automatically admits participants from the waiting room as they arrive. No more watching the little notification pop up, clicking "Admit," and then losing your train of thought. Toggle it on from the in-page toolbar and forget about it. Polls every second, so no one waits longer than they have to. Toggle Mute Shortcut — Cmd+Shift+M on Mac, Ctrl+Shift+M on Windows. This one works globally — even when Google Meet isn't the active window. You're working in a spreadsheet, someone asks you a question on the call, you hit the shortcut, answer, hit it again. No window switching needed. HOW IT WORKS 1. Install MeetKit from the Chrome Web Store. 2. Open or join a Google Meet call. 3. Use the in-page toolbar buttons to toggle Grid View, Push to Talk, and Auto Admit — or use keyboard shortcuts. 4. Adjust settings from the popup by clicking the MeetKit icon in your browser toolbar. That's it. Your settings are saved automatically and persist across sessions. WHY AN IN-PAGE TOOLBAR Most Meet extensions use a small browser popup. You click the icon, flip a toggle, close the popup, and hope it worked. If you want to change something mid-call, you have to open the popup again. MeetKit adds a slim toolbar directly into the Google Meet interface — right next to the native Meet controls. Grid, Push to Talk, and Auto Admit each get their own button. You can see what's active at a glance and toggle anything with a single click, without ever leaving the call view. The result: fewer clicks, less context-switching, and settings that feel like they're part of Meet itself. SETTINGS THAT STICK Every toggle you set is saved to local Chrome storage. Close the tab, restart your browser, come back two days later — your preferences are exactly where you left them. Grid view was on? It's still on. Push to Talk was off? Still off. All settings are stored locally on your machine. Nothing is sent to any server. Nothing is synced to any cloud. Your preferences are yours alone. REAL SCENARIOS WHERE THIS HELPS Online Teaching: You have 30 students in a virtual classroom. With grid view, you can see every face at once — no scrolling, no guessing who's checked out. Auto admit saves you from clicking "Admit" every time a student joins late. Push to talk lets you unmute quickly to answer a question without fumbling for the mute button. Daily Standups: Your team has a 10-person standup every morning. Grid view shows everyone. The global mute shortcut lets you stay muted while working in your IDE and unmute with one keystroke when it's your turn. Client Presentations: You're sharing your screen and presenting to a client. You can't see the Meet window, but you need to unmute to answer a question. Cmd+Shift+M works even though Meet is behind your presentation. No awkward window switching. Large All-Hands Meetings: Your company runs weekly all-hands with 50+ people. Auto admit keeps the meeting flowing without the host manually approving each person. Grid view ensures the speaker highlight shows exactly who's talking. Remote Interviews: You're conducting back-to-back interviews. Each candidate shows up in the waiting room. Auto admit lets them in automatically while you finish your notes from the previous session. Co-Working from Noisy Spaces: You're on a call from a cafe. Push to Talk keeps your mic off by default. Hold space to speak, release to go silent. Your background noise stays out of the call. WHAT THIS EXTENSION DOES NOT DO - Does not collect, store, or transmit any personal data - Does not access any website other than meet.google.com - Does not read or modify any content outside of the Google Meet page The only permissions it uses: - storage — saves your toggle preferences locally (grid on/off, push-to-talk on/off, auto admit on/off). No personal data is stored. - commands — registers global keyboard shortcuts so mute toggle works even when Chrome is in the background. - Host permission for meet.google.com — allows the extension to inject its features into the Google Meet page. No other websites are accessed. That's it. No background network requests. No analytics. No tracking. Everything runs locally in your browser. BUILT ON MANIFEST V3 MeetKit is built from the ground up on Chrome's modern Manifest V3 platform. This matters because: - MV3 extensions use service workers instead of persistent background pages, using fewer resources - MV3 is the only extension framework Google will support going forward — MV2 extensions are being phased out - Extensions built on MV3 pass Chrome Web Store review faster and face fewer compatibility issues over time If you've been using an older grid view or push-to-talk extension that stopped working, there's a good chance it was built on MV2 and hasn't been updated. WHO THIS IS FOR - Teachers and professors who need to see every student on a Google Meet call - Meeting hosts who are tired of manually admitting participants one by one - Remote workers who want to mute and unmute without switching windows - Anyone who has installed 3-5 Google Meet extensions and wishes they could replace them all with one GETTING STARTED Install MeetKit, open a Google Meet call, and your toolbar is ready. Toggle what you need, close what you don't. No account needed. No sign-up. No credit card. Just a cleaner, more functional Google Meet.

Details

  • Version
    1.0.0
  • Updated
    March 24, 2026
  • Size
    23.15KiB
  • Languages
    English
  • Developer
    Email
    foritaitool@gmail.com
  • Non-trader
    This developer has not identified itself as a trader. For consumers in the European Union, please note that consumer rights do not apply to contracts between you and this developer.

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