Why use Google, which will give you ten million irrelevant
hits, when all you really want to do, is to find the juicy stuff on
ScienceBlogs?
Well, you can navigate to the ScienceBlogs home page, and search there,
or go to any of the blogs and use the search boxes there. Or,
to simplify things a bit, use can use a Firefox extension.
First, you have to get
Firefox, if you don't have it already. The install
the "Add to Search Bar" extension (install
here). Once it is installed, you have to restart
Firefox.
Then, go to the ScienceBlogs
home page. Find the search box in the left sidebar.
Right-click in the search box. The little menu
(context menu) that pops up will have an item in it: "Add to search
bar..." Select that, and you are all set.
Then, anytime you want to see whether a ScienceBlogger has posted on a
particular topic, you can select the SB search engine and do the
search, regardless of what page you happen to be looking at.
An added bonus: If the SB search engine is the one that is active, you
can highlight any text on any page, right-click, and select "search
ScienceBlogs for..."
Curious about the Mesozoic Cow? Itching to see the best photo
in the world of the Roseate Skimmer? Now it is simple.
You also can install search engines for your favorite individual blogs
on ScienceBlogs, using the same method. In fact, you can
install search engine for any site that has a
search box.
Search this blog
Profile

Corpus Callosum is written by a psychiatrist at a small community hospital somewhere in midwestern USA. Email to cc.scienceblogger at gmail dot com.
Banner images from CNS Forums. Banner font: Ringbearer.
Feedburner Feed
Quick Add-Feed Links...

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial -Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Recent Posts
- Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- Grappling With Stigma: Influence of Social Media
- Something To Try Sometime
- Scientists Turn to Politics
- Peak Oil, Proton Therapy, and the Future of High-Tech Medicine
- In Which I Succumb To the Fisking Bug
- Shrink-kudos
- Poisoning Ourselves
- Let Us Calculate!
- Marsha Linehan Would Know What To Do
Recent Comments
- Noni Mausa on Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- oyun hileleri on Happy Birthday
- Emily on White Tigers
- PhysioProf on Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- Katharine on Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- Andrew on Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- Zeno on Grad Students as "Security Threats"
- zucchini189 on Agomelatine: A New Approach For Depression
- Dunc on Grappling With Stigma: Influence of Social Media
- Dr Shock on Grappling With Stigma: Influence of Social Media
Categories
- Academia
- Antidepressants
- Armchair Musings
- Basic Concepts
- Bioethics
- CME
- Chatter
- Computing
- Energy
- Environment
- Humor
- Medicine
- Meta
- Neuroscience
- Personal
- Photos of Interest
- Politics
- Propaganda
- Psychiatry
- Public Health
- Science News
- Science in the Media
- Social Commentary
- Social Issues
Archives
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
Blogroll
The main blogroll has been moved to its own page, so as not to delay the opening of the main page.
Carnivals

Other Stuff
« Buy Nothing Day | Main | Foreign Policy: A Suggestion »
Tech Tip #5: Search ScienceBlogs
Category: Meta
Posted on: November 23, 2007 2:19 PM, by Joseph j7uy5
View the Technorati Link Cosmos for this entry
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry:




Comments
Another easy way to search with Firefox is to just right click on any search bar (be that Google, Yahoo, Whatever) and click on "Add a Keyword for this Search...". When the box pops up, Give it any name you want, then type in your keyword (I like to keep things simple and use the keyword "g"). Then whenever you want to search you can just type into the address bar "[Keyword] [Search Item]".
So if you are searching for Google, you can type in "g science blogs" without the quotes from the address bar, and you should get the same results you would typing "science blogs" without quotes into Google's homepage.
Posted by: Webs | November 23, 2007 6:48 PM
Hum. That would seem like blogomorphism.
Posted by: Laurent | November 25, 2007 5:22 PM