Dumping Firefox. Going to Safari.
By Daniel Miessler on September 21st, 2007: Tagged as Apple | Browsers | Firefox | Safari
![]()
Well, Ken mentioned today that he’s going make the switch for a whole month. I told him I couldn’t do it because of Quick Searches, and he replied that they probably had that functionality in Safari through extensions by now.
He was right. I just configured my Google and Wikipedia Quick Searches in Safari. Game over.
Safari is so much tighter than Firefox to me, and now that it has THE piece of functionality that matters most to me in a browser (searching websites from the URL bar) there’s just no need to go without Safari’s advantages any longer. We’ll see how it goes…7 Essential Firefox Quicksearches
By Daniel Miessler on August 19th, 2007: Tagged as Firefox | Google | Search
If you’re not yet using Firefox Quicksearches you’re missing out. Quicksearches allow you to search virtually anything directly from the Firefox URL field.
![]()
Here I just searched for Ron Paul related information on Google. The trick is the first character — in this case “g” — that tells Firefox where to send the query. To set this up just right-click any search field online and select the “Add a Keyword for this search” option. Then give the Quicksearch a good keyword that you’ll remember.
Here are the 7 that everyone should have as a minimum:
- Google — “g” for google, or “s” for search (Google is the new Kleenex)
- You Tube –”v” for video
- Images — “i” for images (searches Google Images)
- Maps — “m” for maps (searches Google Maps)
- Dictionary.com — “d” for dictionary
- Thesaurus.com — “t” for thesaurus
- Bookmarks — “b” for bookmarks (how to search your online bookmarks)
The trick is to customize your set of Quicksearches according to how you use the Internet. Remember that you can add complexity as needed. I search my own website, for example, by sending a site:dmiessler.com query along with whatever I search for, and I use “dm” for my keyword.
![]()
So right from the URL bar I can search my entire site using the power of Google. If you have any questions on setting these up, including the customized Google queries, drop me an email.:
Related: Get Local Time from Google (+ Quicksearch) Combining Quicksearchs with Google Keywords
Searching Your Google Bookmarks From Firefox’s URL Field
By Daniel Miessler on August 16th, 2007: Tagged as Firefox | Google
I was looking for a bookmark of mine on Google Bookmarks a moment ago and did so in a very primitive way — I went to my bookmarks page and typed my query into the search field. Bad form.
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 Google Bookmarks page and simply right-clicked in the search field, elected to create a new quicksearch, and gave it the quicksearch keyword ‘b’. This lets me do this:
b screenshot
…which yields the link on how to take a screenshot in OS X that I saved months ago. 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 within my bookmarks. Now, using this technique, I can search within that highly distilled list of resources directly from the address bar.
So that’s it:
- Set up Google Bookmarks and import your old stuff.
- Go to the Google Bookmarks search field and right-click to add a custom keyword.
- Assign “b” for bookmarks as the shortcut key.
Firefox Quicksearches + Google Keywords = Sick Power
By Daniel Miessler on May 7th, 2007: Tagged as Firefox | Google | Productivity
Back in 2005 I wrote about how you can use Firefox Quicksearches to vastly reduce your search time. You do this by adding a key-character for searches, such as “g” for Google, and “w” for Wikipedia. Then you just do a ctrl/cmd-L to get to Firefox’s URL bar, and then type:
g ron paul
…to search for Ron Paul using Google.
![]()
But now it’s even more powerful due to the Google command line. Instead of just doing regular searches, we can now pass along which type of search we want to do. Here’s how to search for a map of San Francisco, for example:
![]()
…and you can do the same with /img, /title, etc.:
Firefox Destroying Internet Explorer
By Daniel Miessler on February 8th, 2007: Tagged as Blogging | Firefox | Microsoft
I just got curious about Firefox’s progress and was amazed to find how well it did in 2006. Of course this is for my site, so the geekiness factor of the users has to be taken into account.
But still — 62% vs. 23% is insanely high.

I Just Made A Firefox QuickSearch For Google Blog Searches; The Keyword Is “BS”
By Daniel Miessler on February 8th, 2007: Tagged as Blogging | Firefox | Google
It’s pretty cool actually, you can set up a Firefox QuickSearch for doing on the fly searches, like:
bs linux security
…to find recent Linux/security oriented blog content.
<borat>Very nice…</borat>
What’s really cool, though, is that on the left side of your search results you get an RSS option. You can subscribe to these blog searches and use your newsreader to monitor what people in the blogsphere are saying about a given topic.
Pretty cool stuff. Anyway, I just found it interesting that the natural keyword for a blog search is “bs”.
How To Search Your Site Using Google From Firefox’s Address Bar (with code)
By Daniel Miessler on January 22nd, 2007: Tagged as Blogging | Firefox | Google
I’ve recently started searching my site using Google rather than using the built-in Wordpress search. That’s nothing new — pretty much everyone knows that if you use site:yourdomain.com in front of a search term, it’ll search only your domain for that term.
That’s cool and everything, but it doesn’t get really sick until you combine it with Firefox’s Quicksearches. Quicksearches let you configure keywords that you type right into Firefox’s address bar. You can, for example, search Google for “cars” just by typing “g cars” into the URL field. The results will exactly the same as if you had gone to the Google homepage, typed in the word “cars”, and pressed enter.
So since Google is so good at search, and since it’s crawling your site constantly anyway, why not let Google do all the work when you’re looking for links on your own site? That’s what this little shortcut does — it uses a Quicksearch to find exactly what you’re looking for on your site — all without going to your site or to Google.
Adding The Quicksearch Bit
To make this work you just have to make yourself a new bookmark with the correct properties, like so:- Go to Bookmarks –> Organize Bookmarks
- On the top left, select “New Bookmark”
- Give the bookmark a name — something like, “Site Quicksearch”
- Give it a keyword (this is what you’ll type into the URL bar). Try “ss”.
- In the Location field, paste the following:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=site:dmiessler.com%20%s
Then, simply replace “dmiessler.com” with your own site and you’re done. Now hit ctrl-L to get to the address bar and type:
ss linux firewalls (then press enter)
What you’ll get back is Google’s results for “linux firewalls” coming from your page.:

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.:

Internet Explorer 7 Doesn’t Work With Exchange 2003 OWA?
By Daniel Miessler on October 19th, 2006: Tagged as Firefox | IE | Internet Explorer | Microsoft
Great, so IE7 finally launched and it doesn’t work with work’s Exchange 2003 OWA setup. I try to send email and it crashes. Let me just restate that:
If you try to use Microsoft’s flagship browser with the current version of their web-based email application, the program will crash.I know two people who have tried this — me and another guy. Both of us saw the exact same issue. Is it just me or are these people on the ropes? I mean, damn…the new browser doesn’t work with OWA? How can you miss that? Is that considered minor by any stretch of the imagination?
So I’m left using Firefox (a free program) with OWA because if I use Microsoft’s own brand-new browser (with a vulnerability released on the same day it launched) it doesn’t work.
In. Sane. The best programmers in the world and billions of dollars, and I have to use a free product to get mail from OWA. The fall of Microsoft is upon us.

