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Choosy browser
Choosy browser











  1. #CHOOSY BROWSER MAC OS X#
  2. #CHOOSY BROWSER MAC OS#
  3. #CHOOSY BROWSER INSTALL#
  4. #CHOOSY BROWSER DOWNLOAD#

With a browser selection tool, you can! Here are my recommendations: Wouldn't it be nice if I could choose between browsers on the fly, as needed?

#CHOOSY BROWSER MAC OS#

In Mac OS X, as in Windows and Linux, I can specify a default browser for my system, but that browser is used for everything. In fact, sometimes I'll click on a link and want to open it in Safari, because I want to print the page and I find Safari does that better than any other browser, but a few minutes later I'll click on a link and want to open it in Firefox, because I have that browser set up to handle downloading music and movies. I keep several web browsers on my Mac at all times, and I like to switch back and forth between them.

#CHOOSY BROWSER MAC OS X#

In my my book, Mac OS X Snow Leopard for Power Users, I explained it this way:

#CHOOSY BROWSER INSTALL#

To make your life easier, you need to install a browser selection tool. Since you're a web developer, you're going to (a) have more than one web browser on your computer, & (b) want to test your work in more than one browser. Some text editors (BBEdit, for instance) have a feature that lets you open your page in a browser, but Sublime Text does not. I’d also like the capability to open a URL in my default browser-the OS X default, not the Choosy default-regardless of my current Choosy setting for example, by clicking on a link while holding down a modifier key.Say you're coding HTML in Sublime Text & you want to check how it looks in a browser. Which Choosy, I need to open System Preferences to make such a change, which is a hassle. Unlike with Highbrow, you can’t quickly change Choosy’s behavior for example, I like that I can use Highbrow’s menu-bar menu to change its behavior back to “default browser” whenever I plan on using my default browser for a while.

#CHOOSY BROWSER DOWNLOAD#

(You can also download an extension for Firefox and a SIMBL plug-in for Safari that add an “Open Link with Choosy” item to each browser’s contextual menus.) This bookmarklet works even if you have Choosy disabled. As someone who tends to use Safari for the majority of my browsing, switching to Firefox only for those sites that have problems in Safari, I love this feature: I set Choosy to open all links in Safari, but I use Choosy’s bookmarklet to quickly open a page in Firefox. However, Choosy’s developer has providedĪ nifty Web browser bookmarklet that, when selected, lets you open the current Web page in a different browser of your choosing. Unfortunately, as with Highbrow, you can’t manually add programs to this list (although this feature isĪs I mentioned in my review of Highbrow, links clicked within a browser open in that browser Highbrow and Choosy intercept only those links you open from outside of Web browsers-for example, in an e-mail message, a word-processing document, or an HTML file you’re editing. By dragging individual programs up and down in the list, you rank those programs from most to least preferred you can also force Choosy to ignore a program completely by unchecking the box next to the program’s name.

choosy browser

Choosy’s Browsers screen lists all programs that claim to handle Web URLs. Another feature unique to Choosy is the capability to rank your browsers. You may be wondering what I meant by the “best” browser in the previous paragraph.

choosy browser

Although I miss Highbrow’s most-recently-used option, Choosy’s alternatives are varied and useful. If one or more Web browsers are already running, the options include using the “best” currently running browser asking you to choose from among currently running browsers launching your favorite browser or asking you to choose from among all browsers. For example, if no browsers are running when you click on a Web link, Choosy can either launch your favorite browser or ask you to choose a browser. On the other hand, Choosy gives you several alternate behaviors of its own, and you can choose different options depending on whether any browsers are already running. On the one hand, Choosy is missing Highbrow’s options to automatically pick the most-recently-used browser or to simply use your preferred browser. You can also change the size of the icons-smaller icons are more difficult to differentiate, but the smaller layout similarly reduces how far you have to move the cursor.)īut that’s where the similarities between Highbrow and Choosy end. The latter option requires less mousing, as every icon is the same distance from your cursor. The default is a horizontal line of icons that appears directly under your mouse cursor the other choice is a circle of icons centered on your mouse. (You get two options for the appearance of Choosy’s browser picker.













Choosy browser