On the last day of the last year of the last decade, I wrote a blogpost with only one link. I could have linked the songs, the books, etc. but it would have taken a while and it would have been painful. There are far too many steps involved in linking a short phrase – (1) google for the page you want to link to, (2) click the page result, (3) copy the URL from location bar, (4) switch back to this tab, (5) open up the link window and then, (6) paste it in. A couple of things to note here — I assume that most people would rather than do a web search than find something from their own browser history. In most cases, that’s generally easier because only Chrome and Safari have full text search and neither implements it very well. Another thing is I don’t think a lot of people know or use the context menu to “Copy Link Location”, they would rather click through to the page and then, copy the URL.
Linker.app would be a Mac app that works like Quicksilver, LaunchBar or Google Quick Search Box (QSB lets you “search Google” but all it does is open a browser tab with your search keywords). It would also be like Ubiquity which has a fantastic “Link to Wikipedia” command (image below) that links your current selection to the right Wikipedia page. Ubiquity also has a neat Google search command with live previews (image below).


Linker.app would let you hit a system-wide hot-key, do a Google search, view the search results instantly, pick which one to insert1 and then, insert it as a link if the selected text is in a rich text editor or add the link beside the selected text if it’s in a plain text field.
A large portion of humanity’s time is spent on linking. In many blogposts that I have written, linking2 almost takes as long as writing the blogpost itself. Someone has to solve such a massive problem. It’s a great opportunity. If you’re interested in collaborating or working on this idea on your own, let me know.
January 2nd, 2010
by Mardeg
2) Drag the page result to this tab and when it opens keep dragging it to the textfield.
I guess this wouldn’t work if the idiotic javascript “link window” can’t be skipped.
January 2nd, 2010
by Abi Raja
The Author
Mardeg, I think with a bit of habituation the steps I describe will probably take less time than the drag-drop route which requires you to pause for about half a second every single time you hold the text over a tab. And I find drag+drop for extended periods to be quite clumsy. But that’s definitely a alternative to clicking link, selecting location bar, ctrl+c’ing and pasting it again.
January 2nd, 2010
by Tony Mechelynck
I don’t know why you «don’t think a lot of people know or use the context menu to “Copy Link Location”, they would rather click through to the page and then, copy the URL.» The “Copy Link Location” context menu item is something I use constantly, even if at times I also copy a URL from the Location Bar. But then, maybe I’m not your “typical user” either: for one thing, one of the first things I do with a new piece of software is look what menus and preferences are available; for another, after trying IE, NS6/7, Firefox, Opera and Konqueror (not to mention Lynx), I’ve settled on SeaMonkey 2 as my favourite browser, which apparently is not everyone’s choice… :-)
January 12th, 2010
by Abi Raja
The Author
Yep, typical users don’t comment to affirm that they don’t in fact use the “Copy Link Location” context menu item. ;)
February 20th, 2010
by spence
ubiquity’s got this command
http://gibberish.com/hacks/ubiq/lazylink.html
cheers