Posts tagged with “navigation”

Posted 1 year ago

Follow Next by Gavin Gilmour

Creates keybindings that allow you to follow links that look like “next” or “previous” links. Similar to existing Vimperator functionality.

Pattern customisable, works for most obvious-looking things.

Posted 1 year ago

Site Navigation Bar by Nicholas Shanks

Shows a navigation bar for sites that provide meta links.

Posted 1 year ago

gleeBox by Ankit Ahuja and Sameer Ahuja

gleeBox takes a keyboard-centric approach to navigating the web. It provides alternatives to actions that are traditionally performed via the mouse such as clicking, scrolling, selecting text fields, etc. 

Posted 1 year ago

MouseGestures by Kai Straßmann

A simple Safari 5 extension which adds basic mouse gestures to navigate or open/close tabs and windows. 

Posted 1 year ago

Search is (somewhat) working

Tumblr’s search seems to run a day or two behind, and it’s imperfect, but you should get at least some results now if you run a search.

(For the curious, it turned out that the Tumblr theme I’m using didn’t actually include {block:SearchPage} anywhere by default, so it didn’t know how to display results even when it found them.)

For the moment, at least, I’ve changed the search feature to use Google Custom Search. If what you expect to find doesn’t show up at first, it may very well appear if you click “repeat the search with the omitted results included”.

Posted 1 year ago
SnapBack by Philippe Martin

A simple extension that sends you back to the first page in the history of the current window or tab.

Like Reload Button, this extension reinstates a feature Safari once had.

SnapBack by Philippe Martin

A simple extension that sends you back to the first page in the history of the current window or tab.

Like Reload Button, this extension reinstates a feature Safari once had.

Posted 1 year ago

Tag navigation

Just a note: I’ve made a point of adding tags to just about every post. That means that you can find similar posts by clicking on a given post and clicking on a tag.

I don’t guarantee perfect tagging, but I’ve tried to add the same tags to similar, common items. See, for example, the items tagged with “Google Reader”.