Ever wonder if CocoCut will work on your computer? The answer is probably yes. We designed CocoCut to work with today's most popular web browsers. Here's where our extension works.
Supported Browsers
Google Chrome
CocoCut works well with Chrome. We've optimized our extension specifically for Chrome, so if you're running version 70 or newer, you're all set. Just keep Chrome updated for the best performance, and you'll get all our features: high-quality downloads, batch processing, and audio extraction. You can find us on the Chrome Web Store.
Chrome users get the full CocoCut experience, with regular updates and features designed for them.
Microsoft Edge
Edge users, CocoCut runs on Edge 79 and up. The latest version gives you the smoothest experience. Grab it from the Microsoft Edge Add-ons store.
Other Chromium-Based Browsers
CocoCut also works with other Chromium-based browsers:
Brave:Works on version 1.5 and newer.
Vivaldi:For power users, version 3.0+ works well.
Opera:Version 60+ with Chrome extensions enabled works great.
Arc:The new kid on the block, version 1.0+ is supported.
Operating System Requirements
CocoCut works with most operating systems. As long as your browser is compatible, you're good to go.
Windows:Works on Windows 10 and 11. It'll still run on 8.1, and even 7 if you're holding onto an older machine.
macOS:Loves Catalina (10.15) and newer. It can work on Mojave (10.14) too.
Linux:Modern distros like Ubuntu 20.04+ or Fedora 35+ are all set.
And Mobile?
For now, CocoCut is just for desktop. Browser extensions on mobile have limitations, so you won't find us on iOS Safari or Android Chrome yet.
System Requirements
You don't need a powerful machine. If your computer was made in the last decade, it should work. Here's what you need:
Processor:A 1 GHz processor (anything made in the last 10 years).
RAM:1-2 GB. Your browser tabs are probably using more than that already.
Storage:100 MB of free space. That's less than a single video!
Just make sure your browser is up-to-date and JavaScript is enabled (it usually is by default). That's it!