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NoteMe

- by Øyvind Østlund

Navigating in Opera using nicknames and search:

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Many of you probably know you can have nicknames for your bookmarks in Opera. But did you know adding search capability to your "bookmark" can be a way of navigating?



Nicknames for the keyboard lover:
Both in Opera and Firefox you can add a nick name to a bookmark so you don't have to write the whole URL every time you want to visit a page, and you don't even have to find the bookmark, and best of all, you don't have to even click it.



You can write what ever you want in the nickname text box, and later on write the same word in your address bar if you want to go to the page the bookmark points to. All nicknames has to be different, but there is no minimum limit of characters. This allows me to reach most of my daily browsing pages just by activating the address bar Ctrl+L and then typing the two letters I chose my self, and then press Enter. No mouse needed, and next to no effort to get there. If you don't know how to set it up Daniel Goldman once wrote a pretty good tutorial on the topic.



I know what a nickname is, show me the "new" stuff:
Both in Opera and Firefox, you are able to add nicknames to searches as well. The two implementations differs a bit, but they both provide more or less exactly the same possibilities. In Opera a search differs from a bookmark for some reason, although behaves pretty much the same way. First you store the URL, then you can add a nickname. The only part that is different is that you replace the actual search therm in the URL with the letters %s.

Now to use it, you highlight the addressbar by clicking it or pressing Ctrl+L on your keyboard as you did with bookmarks, but after writing the nickname you gave the search, you press Space and then your search term. It can be a single word or a phrase or anything you might want to search for. Exactly as you do at Yahoo.com or Live.com when you search a page. But the cool trick is that there is no law saying you can only do this on search engines around the web. Why not do it for any page you frequently visit. Take MyOpera.com as an example. If I am at the index page and I want to go to EspenAO's blog. I have a few possibilities, but non of them are direct. I know I have added him as a friend. So I could go to my own blog, then go to my friend page, and then scroll up and down until I find him. And then click his image, just to notice I didn't get to his blog, but his info page instead so an additional click has to be done to get where I wanted. Not only did I have to click quite a bit, but if I was sitting on a slow connection it would take ages to get there. Can you see where I am going with this?



Sounds complicated, walk me through it:
MyOpera is a good example, so lets do that one togheter. All the URLs to the blogs here look the same, except for the different dame in the middle of the URL. For example my URL looks like http://my.opera.com/noteme/blog/. Now go to Tools->Preferences, and then choose the Search tab, and you should be presented with a dialog looking something like the below.



Then press the Add button to add a new "search". A new dialog will open looking pretty much like the one you are used to from your bookmarks. Click the Detail button to see all the fields we need. Then start to fill out the fields as shown on the image below.



The Name field is just for you to recognise what search it is. While the keyword field is where you add the nickname that you will use to activate the search. I chose my but you are free to chose what ever you want. In the Address field you write the URL to a random MyOpera blog, and then replace the name of the blog with %s, and you are good to go. Just click OK and you got yourself a brand new search with a twist.

Now to test it out open up a new tab (Ctrl+t). Then type my noteme before pressing Enter and see your browser redirecting gracefully to my blog. Replacing noteme with desktopblog will direct you to the desktopteam blog, and so on.



And that's it. Now you can navigate all the blogs in the world, and you don't even have to touch your mouse. Hope you will enjoy it as much as I do.






- Øyvind Østlund -

Starting Opera and attaching Inspector in one go:Proud member of the week :

Comments

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These kinds of customizations are what I love about Opera. :up:

By BAMAToNE, # 22. January 2008, 02:13:24

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Thank you for the tutorial. Every click saved is worth a lot! :happy:

By attilasoul, # 22. January 2008, 05:19:10

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uhh thats pretty nice with the %s :eek:

By agony, # 22. January 2008, 05:36:52

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Hehe! Even though I love browsing with Opera using mouse gestures it was very useful to read about this kind of navigation! :up: I haven't used Opera's bookmark cause I had Speed Dial, del.icio.us (it's a pity that Google Bookmarks bookmarklet doesn't work with Opera) and addresses history right at the address bar. I haven't even was so glad when synchronization feature was introduced in 9.5 alpha. Cause I didn't use personal panel and bookmarks.

But now I think, I'll start to use Opera bookmarks! :cheers:

By melnichuck, # 22. January 2008, 07:14:57

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I wouldn't have thought about using the URL bar search for that :D Nice idea!

By zomg, # 22. January 2008, 14:44:34

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Nice trick !
I have to learn using Opera step-by-step. It's not complicated but full of features !

By Findar, # 22. January 2008, 22:05:23

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Thanks everyone. Glad you liked it. It's fun when an application can get customized so much that you can use one feature to enhance a totally different one.

If I only had some more time off work so I could finish that pet project of mine to gather all the tips and tricks at one place... :frown:


- ØØ -

By NoteMe, # 23. January 2008, 17:03:07

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You've been tagged! :cool:

By MizzMartinez, # 30. January 2008, 21:08:58

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good point with using the search term as a part of the url, not just as a search param. I knew about the custom searches, I've added to imdb, wikipedia and some other stuff to mine, but didn't think of using it this way...

I prefer to use F8 instead of ctrl+l to go to the address bar, but I see that that is not an universal (all platform) shortcut. Though F2 (go to page) can also be used and that one is universal. Just pointing out all the posibilites Opera can give :D

By Quinnuendo, # 1. February 2008, 15:32:20

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I can definitely learn things from here. It's well written and has pictures. :yes: I'll be back.

By dragon_harrower, # 8. February 2008, 16:04:05

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Wow. I actually never thought of doing this. I'm going to add this RIGHT NOW.

By Khadgar, # 13. February 2008, 16:39:26

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Give me headache!!

By Arabianbarbie, # 22. February 2008, 21:48:59

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Awesome tips, thanks!

By AleksOD, # 25. February 2008, 17:06:00

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Interesting nickname trick, Øyvind. :smile:

By kamalesh, # 23. April 2008, 07:07:28

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Thanks, I have gotten so used to it, I can't remember how I navigated forums and communities before :smile: (Although not all communities have SEO friendly URLs as MyOpera)


- ØØ -

By NoteMe, # 23. April 2008, 07:11:04

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