How To Create Dynamic Digg/Reddit/Del.icio.us Buttons For Your Pages (Includes Code)
By Daniel Miessler on January 16th, 2007: Tagged as Blogging | Delicious | Digg | Reddit | Social
Everyone’s seen the cool little icons/buttons for Digg, Reddit, and Del.icio.us shown under various articles online. They make it easy for users to submit to their favorite social site by automatically filling in the title of your page. I also think they subconsciously add legitimacy to a web presence. In short, they’re just great to have.
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A number of plugins can be installed in your blogging software to enable this functionality, but what happens if you want to use these little jems on your own static content? I wondered the same thing and made my own.
Here’s the code (click the image):
Just edit the code to point to your own copies of the images and you’re good to go. Now you can have them on whatever content you create — even if it’s not part of your blog software.:How To Search Your Del.icio.us Bookmarks From Firefox’s Address Bar
By Daniel Miessler on December 7th, 2006: Tagged as Delicious | Firefox | Productivity | RSS
Many know about the merits of Del.icio.us (no intro necessary), and plenty of others are also aware of Firefox Quick Searches, which allow you to search anything from the Firefox address bar. Very few, however, know how powerful it is to combine them.
Peanut Butter + Chocolate
The cool thing about Del.icio.us is that it combines two really cool technologies: RSS and Tags. This functionality is really sick just by itself; it lets you subscribe to your friends’ bookmarks via a news aggregator, search for interesting bookmarks on a certain subject, etc.But when you combine that power with Firefox you get something truly brutal — searching bookmarks from the address bar.Here’s how you do it:
- Log in to your Del.icio.us page
- Right-click in the search-field
- Select “Add a Keyword for this Search”
- Give it a keyword of “b” (for bookmarks)
- Name it “Bookmarks Quicksearch”, or whatever
b searchterm
So simple, yet so powerful.:

3 Steps to Highly Efficient News Reading
By Daniel Miessler on March 14th, 2006: Tagged as Delicious | GTD | Geek | Productivity | RSS
Few things are as important to geeks as how they stay informed. Knowledge is so key to us that the ability to pull it in, process it, and ensure that it’s recallable, is absolutely vital to being effective in our work.
One of the main problems we as information fetishists face is the lack of a solid, repeatable methodology for processing new input online. Too often we bounce back and forth between this site and that site, maybe check a blog or two, and then half-heartedly label the task of “reading news” as completed. This approach is not only a really poor way to stay on top of what’s new, but it’s also very anti-GTD.
The GTD Approach
For those not familiar with the GTD system, this essentially means that part of your mind will linger on activities that it doesn’t believe were performed adequately. This is actually a horrible way to go about your day; you want all your brain power focused on your current task, and being “sure” you’ve adequately absorbed today’s new information is crucial to this.Below I touch on three main steps for accomplishing this goal. Following this simple methodology will ensure that you not only get the best information every time you start a news reading session, but it’ll also help you to actually trust that you’ve had a quality news gathering experience. This trust is what will allow you to move forward in a focused manner, with all your processor and RAM where it should be — on your current task.
Have Quality Sources
At the core of efficient news reading is having quality sources. The phrase, “garbage in - garbage out” comes to mind — meaning the better your sources are, and the tighter they’re tweaked towards the kind of news you are looking for, the more efficient your individual sessions will be.Aggregation Is Key
One of the coolest recent developments for people who value both time and information has been the emergence of meta-sources, or aggregated sources, of news. Three of these that I deem as absolutely crucial are listed below:- Digg Digg is an essential resource. Watching the front page for this site yields perhaps the hottest technology stories of the moment. It’s purely technical, so you’re not going to see it watered down with other types of content. If you’re a technical geek and this isn’t one of your sources you need to attack yourself.
- Populicious Populicious is one of the most interesting sources out there. As the name betrays, it’s based on Del.icio.us, which is perhaps one of the most incredible projects ever. Essentially, Del.icio.us is a massive, social, database of peoples’ bookmarks.
The key there is the social part; it means that people can not only watch what others are bookmarking, but they can also see what categories they are assigning to those bookmarks. Then, and here’s the rub, you can search based on all this stuff. You can say, “Show me everything my friend bookmarks as Linux related.”, or “Show me everything that everyone bookmarks as Security related.” Well, Populicious shows you the most popular bookmarks from all Del.icio.us users worldwide. It’s most excellent.

Not to pick on any particular site, but if you read a lot of different technical sources you may notice that content rarely shows up on Slashdot without first being hitting at least one other site. The question then becomes — do you need that site as well? Look for these types of sources within your list and see where you can trim them.
So that brings us to the most important element of all this — have a list. Having a single list of sources that you invariably use is the centerpiece of efficient news reading. Checking different sources at different times — and sometimes missing a few of the key ones — is not a way to develop trust in your news gathering method. So first and foremost, get your sources together. Tweak them. Hone them. That’s where we start.
Here’s a sample list of sources that’s part of what I read daily. Save that as an OPML file and import it into your favorite reader to get started with a decent set of general and InfoSec related feeds.
Read Efficiently
The second piece of the evolved news reading puzzle is being able to quickly rip through the sources that you’ve decided on. Too many people suffer on this step and end up mangled in a car wreck of bookmarks and open browser windows.My technique is to use two applications — a standalone RSS news reader and Firefox. I use NewNewsWire for my RSS Reader. The trick here is to operate in two steps:
- Open your news reader and select the items you want to read, which then open in Firefox as new tabs. When you’re done going through your feeds, close your news reader.
- Go into Firefox, and starting on the leftmost tab, read each one until you’re finished.
Once you’ve opened all the stories that interest you and closed your reader, everything you need to see today is now waiting for you in Firefox.It sounds weird, but this is precisely what your mind needs to hear in order to be able to proceed. Without hearing this you’re left with a quiet nagging in the back of the mind. “Did I see everything?” “What did I miss?” These sorts of thoughts keep you from functioning optimally. But now that you can dismiss this sort of tugging at your attention, you are free to fully immerse yourself in the current task.
Archive
The final piece of this whole absorbtion process is archiving what you find interesting. You do this not only so that you can maybe go back and brush up on it later, but so you can refer others to it easily when it comes up in conversation.My solution for this is Del.icio.us - a free service that allows you to keep and share your bookmarks online. The key thing about the system is its use of tags. One of the coolest things about Del.icio.us is that, when combined with Firefox Quicksearches, you can do instant URL bar searches of everything you’ve archived in the past (which for me is currently 743 sites). For me it’s as simple as this:
d linux firewall
This simple query put into my URL bar will search every bookmark I’ve ever put on the site that have those two tags assigned to them. Very powerful stuff.
Putting It All Together
Ok, so now that we’ve got all those steps, let’s see how it plays out:- Open your RSS reader.
- Go through your feeds and either read each item right in the reader or open it separately (in a browser tab).
- When you’ve gone through all your feeds, close your reader; you’re done with it.
- Go to your browser and start from the left-most tab. Read each item, focusing on the core content and not the fluff. Remember, most items are like 80% fluff.
- If the item is a good reference or you may want to read it again or show it to others, archive it using a service like Del.icio.us.
- When you’re done processing all the open tabs, you’re done reading news.
The cool thing about this system is that you not only cover all your news in a repeatable, dependable way, but you also do so very quickly. This gives more time to do what’s important, namely putting all that newfound information to use.:
Firefox Quicksearches + Delicious = Godlike Powers
By Daniel Miessler on July 16th, 2005: Tagged as Delicious | Firefox | Social
I was looking for a bookmark of mine on delicious a moment ago and did so in a very primitive way — I went to my delicious page and typed my query into the search field.
Well, it dawned on me that there’s a much better way to do this. After remembering that I use Firefox Quicksearches to make my searching tasks more efficient, I went back to my delicious page and simply right-clicked in the search field, elected to create a new quicksearch, and gave it the quicksearch keyword ‘d’. This lets me do this:
d screenshot
…which yields the link on how to take a screenshot in OS X. The key here is that I just searched all of my own custom bookmarks — all of which I added tags and wrote a description for. This is so powerful because I have already narrowed down what I find interesting on my delicious page. Now, using this technique, I can search within that highly distilled list of resources directly from the address bar.
It Gets Crazier
While searching my own links is likely to be most useful, a friend of mine and I instantly realized that this should be extended to the uber-powerful ability to search the delicious/tags option. This, for anyone not familiar, let’s you search for results bearing a particular tag name, i.e. dogs, pictures, etc.The thing that makes this so powerful is the ability to combine tags to really bring out specific results. You can search for programming+xml, for example, and get back a list of results that have both the programming AND xml tags applied across the entire delicious userbase. Very cool stuff.
Well, let’s add a quicksearch for this functionality and make it possible to yield this godlike power directly from the Firefox address bar. First, go to the delicious tags page. Then right-click in that search field and create another quicksearch. I gave mine the dt keyword. This lets us do this:
dt linux security
Uber-sick. You can, of course, combine tags for searches within your own links using this same method, like so:
d programming css
It’s quite powerful and I’m sure I’ll use it almost every day. Hopefully someone else will get some use out of it as well.
Firefox QuickSearches + Delicious Search = Godlike Powers
By Daniel Miessler on June 29th, 2005: Tagged as Delicious | Firefox | Technology
I was looking for a bookmark of mine on delicious a moment ago and did so in a very primitive way — I went to my delicious page and typed my query into the search field.
Well, it dawned on me that there’s a much better way to do this. After remembering that I use Firefox Quicksearches to make my searching tasks more efficient, I went back to my delicious page and simply right-clicked in the search field, elected to create a new quicksearch, and gave it the quicksearch keyword ‘d’. This lets me do this:
d screenshot
…which yields the link on how to take a screenshot in OS X. The key here is that I just searched all of my own custom bookmarks — all of which I added tags and wrote a description for. This is so powerful because I have already narrowed down what I find interesting on my delicious page. Now, using this technique, I can search within that highly distilled list of resources directly from the address bar.
It Gets Crazier
While searching my own links is likely to be most useful, a friend of mine and I instantly realized that this should be extended to the uber-powerful ability to search the delicious/tags option. This, for anyone not familiar, let’s you search for results bearing a particular tag name, i.e. dogs, pictures, etc.The thing that makes this so powerful is the ability to combine tags to really bring out specific results. You can search for programming+xml, for example, and get back a list of results that have both the programming AND xml tags applied across the entire delicious userbase. Very cool stuff.
Well, let’s add a quicksearch for this functionality and make it possible to yield this godlike power directly from the Firefox address bar. First, go to the delicious tags page. Then right-click in that search field and create another quicksearch. I gave mine the dt keyword. This lets us do this:
dt linux security
Uber-sick. You can, of course, combine tags for searches within your own links using this same method, like so:
d programming css
It’s quite powerful and I’m sure I’ll use it almost every day. Hopefully someone else will get some use out of it as well.



