Posts Tagged ‘ Firefox ’
I have written some Ruby scripts (using ERB + Rake to build and git to track+publish) to maintain my personal repository of Ubiquity commands. In addition to automagically generating pages for me, there is also a consolidated command feed which contains all of the commands I use personally. You can check out my commands at [ READ MORE ]
I am not the only one who got slammed by the broken upgrade to Ubiquity 0.1.6. In the new version, all ubiquity commands are lost, which is bad. It’s been reported, discussed and patched. Unfortunately, a new release has not been issued yet and I find myself rather paralyzed given how much I have come [ READ MORE ]
Aside from Linux (Debian in particular) and emacs, Firefox might be my all-time favorite piece of software. I use it for so very much because the web is such a wonderful thing. I’ve used plenty of other web browsers. I used IE back in my *very* early windows days. After that, I moved to Opera [ READ MORE ]
After enjoying using and developing for Ubiquity a great deal, I wanted to provided a brief howto for those wishing to get into Ubiquity command development. I wrote this after reading the command author tutorial (which you *must* read) and heavily consulting the source of the commands included in Ubiquity by default (which you *should* [ READ MORE ]
I recently mentioned Ubiquity, Firefox’s new experimental command line for the browser. Anyway, I was tinkering about with the command author tutorial after the upgrade to 0.11 and browsing the source of the included commands when I decided to try my hand at authoring my own command. After messing about with some of the basics [ READ MORE ]
As is being covered on sites and blogs across the webbernet, Mozilla labs released their first semi-usable beta of their new browser interface called Ubiquity. Unlike Goosh (the unofficial command shell for Google), Ubiquity is a command line interface which uses natural language to execute intelligent behaviors. The screenshots look absolutely fabulous and the concept [ READ MORE ]