Good news for Firefox users. Mozilla wants to make searching faster on Firefox. To make that happen, the company will be introducing an update in the future that adds a new search interface. With this new search, users can type a keyword into the search field, then choose a specific preset search engine or website where they want to view the result. Sites like Wikipedia and Google.
This news comes after we heard that Yahoo will be the browser’s new default search option.
Mozilla announced the new one-click search feature yesterday, and even though it only says the functionality is “coming soon” and we don’t have a firm date yet, it has given us a look at what users can expect. The idea is that sometimes you search for something and you want it from a specific website like Wikipedia. Firefox will include several search engines and sites already set and ready for use. Sites like DuckDuckGo, Bing, Google, Twitter, eBay, Wikipedia, Yahoo, and the Mozilla Developer Network. Users can even add other websites and search engines to the list. You just have to go to that site, click on the magnifying glass in the search field, and then select the “Add SITE” option in the drop-down menu. This sounds very useful for Firefox users and will save some time.
Source Slashgear
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