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The Real Difference Between a URL and a URI

firefox-logo

One of the coolest (yet little-known) features in Firefox is the ability to
search virtually any website via your address bar. To do this, simply
right-click in the search field of a site you want to search and select,
“Add A Keyword For This Search”. Once you’ve done this you’ll be
prompted to create a bookmark. Call it $whatever-quicksearch and then
give it a keyword.

The keyword is the “key” to the whole thing.
It’s the prefix that you’re going to use to search that site from now on
from the Firefox address bar
. Example: I have a quicksearch for Google and its keyword is ‘g’.
This lets me search the entire Google site from Firefox’s address bar, just
by using the ‘g’ prefix.

So if I am looking for some GTD information related to osx, I can type:

g gtd osx

…which will yield all the results I would have gotten from the main Google
site. The difference is that all I had to do was 1) Command-L (Control-L in
Windows and Linux) to take me to the address bar, and 2) type my
quicksearch prefix + searchterm.

Now, this wouldn’t be all that cool if it worked only for Google, but it
works for just about any site you want to search. Just go to the site, make
your bookmark/keyword combo, and start saving massive amounts of search time
via the Firefox address bar. Below are a few that I have configured. Enjoy.:

Googleg $searchterms

Technoratit $searchterms

Wikipediaw $searchterms

MSN Searchm $searchterms

Amazona $searchterms

Gentoo Forumsgf $searchterms

Delicious Tagsdt $searchterms

May 23, 2025

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