Posts Tagged ‘Firefox’

Firefox 12 Inline Autocomplete Feature

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

Firefox 12 Inline Autocomplete Feature

When you type in characters into the Firefox address bar you will notice that a suggestion box appears right below it. This suggestion box lists sites that you have visited in the past or bookmarked so that you can access those sites faster with just a click or the down cursor. Add-ons like Enter Select make this feature more comfortable by loading the first appearing result with the enter key.

A recent feature addition to Firefox 12 is causing some controversy among users. Firefox 12 is currently available in the Nightly channel before it moves on to the Aurora, Beta and then Stable channel. This means that the majority of Firefox users will experience the new feature – if not altered – in about 13 weeks.

Firefox 12 introduces the inline autocomplete feature in the browser which displays the first matching root url in the address bar. Firefox users can then use the enter key to automatically load the website in the browser.

The two core problems here are that Firefox is not displaying the most popular url in the address bar, and that it only looks at the root url and not page title for a match. As you can see on the screenshot above, entering the characters wi does not autocomplete to en.wikipedia.org or another appropriate hit, but to wisestartupblog, a site that I read an article once on.

One could now say that it does not really change the existing functionality, as it is still possible to select suggested results from the list with the mouse or cursor keys. The change is visual on the other hand and may irritate users who are not used to seeing entries being auto-completed. The issue that weights far more heavily is how results are selected. Instead of displaying a site that the user likely wants to visit, the first matching site is displayed. And while this may sometimes be the site the user wants to visit, it often may not be that site especially since there is no popularity check involved.

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Facebook’s ‘don’t be evil’ Google fix now a Chrome extension

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

Facebook’s ‘don’t be evil’ Google fix now a Chrome extension

Summary: Facebook’s “don’t be evil” bookmarklet, which tweaks Google’s Search plus Your World (SPYW) feature to include more social networks, has been ported to a Google Chrome extension.

Well, that didn’t take long. Earlier today, Blake Ross, Facebook’s product director and co-founder of Firefox, and Facebook engineers Tom Occhino and Marshall Roch released a bookmarklet called “don’t be evil” (a jab at Google’s informal motto) that tweaks Google’s newly launched Search plus Your World (SPYW) feature to surface results from all social networks, not just Google+. Computer Science student Andrew Guenther has released a Google Chrome extension based on the original script; you can download it yourself from Google’s Chrome Web Store.

Here’s the official description:

Modifies Google’s hardcoded Google+ search results and replaces them with real social media results.
This extension is based off of the http://www.focusontheuser.com’s bookmarklet which replaces Google’s hardcoded Google+ search results with real social media results.

The original bookmarklet requires that you click on it after you submit your query to Google. The new results include links to CrunchBase (not exactly a social network, but okay), Facebook, Flickr, Foursquare, FriendFeed, GitHub, Google+, LinkedIn, MySpace, Quora, Stack Overflow, Tumblr, Twitter, instead of just Google+. Once you’ve visited google.com and clicked on the bookmarklet once, it will continue to work for subsequent queries until you click away from google.com. Next time you visit google.com, however, you have to click the bookmarklet again.

The group released the code as open source in the hopes that someone would turn the bookmarklet into a browser extension so that you don’t have to click it every time you visit google.com. You can view the JavaScript code yourself over at focusontheuser.org/dontbeevil/script.js. Both the bookmarklet and extension thus work the same way, since they’re based on the same script; the latter is just a more automatic version than the former.

As such, these four paragraphs describing the bookmarklet are also accurate for the extension:

If Google’s search engine decides that it’s relevant to surface a Google+ page in response to a query where Google+ content is hardcoded, the tool searches Google for the name of the Google+ page and identifies the social profiles within the first ten pages of Google’s search results (top 100 results). The ones Google ranks highest, regardless of what social network they are from, replace the previous results that would only be from Google+.

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Online companies win US piracy fight

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Online companies win US piracy fight

Outspent but hardly outgunned, online and high-tech companies triggered an avalanche of internet clicks last week to force Congress to shelve legislation that would curb online piracy.

They outmanoeuvred the entertainment industry and other old guard business interests, leaving them bitter and befuddled.

Before Senate and House leaders set aside the legislation on Friday, US time, the movie and music lobbies and other Washington fixtures, including the US Chamber of Commerce, had put in play their usually reliable tactics to rally support for the bills.

There were email campaigns, television and print ads in important states, a Times Square billboard, and uncounted phone calls and visits to congressional offices in Washington and around the country. That included about 20 trips to the Capitol by leaders of the National Songwriters Association International, often accompanied by songwriters who performed their hits for lawmakers and their staffs.

“We bring our guitars on our backs,” said songwriter Steve Bogard, the association’s president.

Such campaigns are often music to the ears of lawmakers. This time, however, it was smothered by an online outpouring against the legislation that culminated on Wednesday.

According to organisers, at least 75,000 websites temporarily went dark that day, including the English-language online encyclopedia Wikipedia, joined by 25,000 blogs.

“The US Congress is considering legislation that could fatally damage the free and open internet,” said a message on Wikipedia’s home page, which was shrouded in shadows and provided links to help visitors reach their members of Congress.

Thousands of other sites posted messages protesting the bills and urging people to contact lawmakers. Protest leaders say that resulted in 3 million emails.

Google, its logo hidden beneath a stark black rectangle, solicited 7 million signatures on a petition opposing the bills. Craigslist counted 30,000 phone calls to lawmakers and there were 3.9 million tweets on Twitter about the bills, according to NetCoalition, which represents leading internet and high tech companies.

“It’s still something we’re trying to comprehend,” said Google spokeswoman Samantha Smith. “We had such an overwhelming response to our petition that it honestly far exceeded our expectations.”

As co-sponsors of the bills peeled away, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid postponed a vote that had been set for this Tuesday on moving to the legislation.

The vote seemed doomed well beforehand. Rep. Lamar Smith, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, also put off further work. “I have heard from the critics,” he said.

Just weeks ago, the bills seemed headed toward quiet approval with bipartisan backing that ranged from liberals such as Rep. Howard Berman, a California Democrat, to conservatives such as Sen. Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican.

The turnabout was so unexpected that some think the online world’s triumph signals a pivotal moment marking its arrival as Washington’s newest power broker.

“This does serve as a watershed moment,” said Jennifer Stromer-Galley, a communications professor at the State University of New York at Albany who studies how political groups use high technology. “Certain channels for communication that people routinely use have the power to get their users to become political activists on their behalf.”

Both bills are aimed at thwarting illegal downloads and sales of thousands of American movies, songs and books, as well as counterfeit pharmaceuticals, software and other copyrighted products.

They would do so by making it easier to stop American websites and search engines from steering visitors to largely foreign websites that pirate the items.

Supporters estimate that online piracy costs the US at least US$100 billion annually and thousands of jobs; even the bills’ critics say sales of pirated products must be stopped. But foes say the legislation goes too far, threatening to curb internet free speech, stifle online innovation and burden online businesses with damaging regulations.

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Load The Homepage When Firefox Opens A New Tab

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Load The Homepage When Firefox Opens A New Tab

When you open a new tab in the Firefox browser you’ll notice that it always opens up blank. Mozilla announced plans to redesign the new tab page in an upcoming version of the browser, but for now blank is all you get. While tabs open fast because of this, it is for some users not the optimal solution, especially if they have one page that they open very often in new tabs.

Lets say you open Google or Bing search, Reddit or Hacker News more than 50% of the time when you open a new tab in Firefox. Instead of having to load the search engine manually you could simply use the My Homepage extension for Firefox to have the browser load the page automatically for you.

The add-on works automatically after installation and restart of the browser. Whatever you have set your homepage to will be loaded when you open a new tab in the browser. Keep in mind that this can also be quite irritating if you have it set to open a page that you have open all the time in the browser.

This works best for pages that either provide a functionality that you use often, or pages that are updated regularly.

Please note that this will only load the first homepage configured in the Firefox options. The extension ignores the | separator to load multiple homepages in the browser.

You sometimes may not want to open the homepage in the new tab. The developer has enabled the shortcut Ctrl-Alt-M for this. When you use the shortcut to open a new tab in Firefox, a blank page will be opened.

Firefox users can download My Homepage from the Mozilla Firefox add-ons repository.

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Mozilla credits Firefox impact in SOPA backlash

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Mozilla credits Firefox impact in SOPA backlash

Mozilla extolled the impact of its 12-hour participation in Wednesday’s anti-SOPA strike, saying Firefox users and fans generated over a third-of-a-million emails to the US Congress.

Two days ago, Mozilla blackened Firefox’s default home page and redirected its websites to an ‘action page’ asking users to contact their federal representatives and voice their opposition to “Internet blacklist legislation.”

Mozilla joined other websites, including Craigslist, Google and Wikipedia, in a one-day “virtual strike” to drum up resistance to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA), bills being considered by the US House of Representatives and the Senate, respectively.

Since last week’s blackout, Washington politicians have backpedaled on the legislation. Friday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) postponed next week’s vote on PIPA, while Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said the committee was also postponing action “until there is wider agreement on a solution.”

According to Mozilla, Firefox users were instrumental in getting the message to Congress.

“Ultimately, 360,000 emails were sent by Mozillians to members of Congress, contributing a third of all the emails generated by EFF’s campaign site,” said Mozilla in a blog post Thursday.

Both the revised Firefox home page and the special action page offered users a button that led them to a page hosted by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a San Francisco-based Internet rights advocacy group. The EFF page provided a way for visitors to quickly email their House and Senate representatives.

More than half of the people who reached the EFF page from Firefox or Mozilla’s websites fired off emails to Congress.

In a separate statement Friday, the EFF said it had helped users send about 1 million emails.

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