September 18, 2008 posted by David Hoff
Filed under Industry News
Searching in Google Chrome
One of the coolest features of Google’s new browser (aside from the wickedly fast javascript engine called V-8) is the Omni box. What makes it useful is that you can search for anything and everything from one place.
Are you a little in the dark about where the Omni box is? Well, its better know as the address bar. Yes, in the same place that you would normally type “www.mysite.com”, is where you can also just type in text as if you where on the Google search page. Too easy.
Not content to leave things well enough alone, Google added the ability to customize the engines that are processing your searches; this means that if you have other places that you frequently search, like wikipedia or even Google Docs, you can easily add these engines to the default list. Here’s how:
Right Click in the address bar and select Edit Search Engines and on the next window select Add. You need to give your custom search engine a name and keyword. On the URL box, paste in one of the URLs listed below. Now when you search, these results will be included in the list. How simple was that? Feel free to post a comment
Wikipedia – URL:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=%s
Google Images – URL:
http://images.google.com/images?gbv=2&hl=en&q=%s&btnG=Search+Images
Google Maps – URL:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&q=%s
Digg.com – URL:
http://digg.com/search?s=%s




From Google’s website: “Google Chrome for Mac is in development and a team of engineers is working hard to bring it to you as soon as possible.”
Click the link below to add your email address to Google’s announcement list:
http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en/mac.html