Would love for you to try it out and give feedback!
One question I have is why is this preferable to creating these commands using the browser search engine integration directly? They support keyword prefixes. They support a command line like pass through structure.
there are a couple benefits to building it this way, for example sharing commands across an organization is now possible (so for example you can create a command and make it available to your company to use.)
for example, we use it at my company AirGarage to search django admin, open company zoom links, open reports, etc and if one person adds a command everyone can use it
I'd be interesting in using this but if I understand correctly this works by replacing the search functionality which means all my searches go to jumprope. I am not sure if there is a way around this in chrome but for me it's a deal breaker.
What is the AI aspect of it? (assuming based on the URL)
and yes, I do agree memorization is hard with more than a few commands. I am trying to solve it by adding jumps to the search suggestions, so when you type things like drive.google a search suggestion will say "tip, use gd to open or search google drive"
You can create your own shortcuts at https://jumprope.ai without needing to submit them to ddg
You can also do alias commands - for example I set it up so "prs" opens me github pull requests page for example and "zm" opens the company zoom link
but yes thanks for the heads up!
You can create your own shortcuts at https://jumprope.ai without needing to submit them to ddg for approval
You can also do alias commands - for example I set it up so "prs" opens me github pull requests page for example and "zm" opens the company zoom link
but yes looks like bangs has some cool regex manipulation but hopefully Jumprope is easier to get started with.
I have a bookmark called "my issues" that opens jira with a custom filter where I appear, and another called "my merge requests" that opens gitlab with my open MRs. I can rename those bookmarks to be shorter, maybe "i" and "prs" if I want. My browser is configured to not show any search suggestions, so I literally type "merge<TAB><Enter>" and I'm on the list of merge requests.
Jumprope would give me the added benefit of sharing those with other people, but I like building my own configuration -- what makes sense for someone may be counter-intuitive for me, and vice versa.
In any case, good luck! This seems like something I'd want to use!
Too many solutions just didn’t quite work, or were a pain to setup. Losing email sucks, and not knowing you’re missing them leads to unnecessary paranoia.
You can even add search keywords by right clicking on a search field -> "Add a keyword for this search". It works on intranets and internal knowledge bases too.
[1] https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-search-from-address...
I've done similar thing with YouTube where I type "YY{space}" from anywhere and end up searching on YouTube.
let me know if this is the wrong diagnosis.
c1 new - create a new calendar invite
m1 new - create a new email in gmail
!fb elise d
!drive resume
!github APIClient
!zoom.us standup
DuckDuckGo does not, however, have bang shortcuts for Stripe or some of the other example commands.