Google Toolbar for Firefox

googleGoogle has released its official Google Toolbar for Firefox. The toolbar has been available for M$ Internet Explorer for some time, and if you just have to use IE I highly recommend it for its pop-up blocking capabilities alone; Firefox is good enough at pop-up blocking that this feature is not necessary.

Similar toolbars have been available as third-party extensions for Firefox, but this one seems to integrate more features, including: PageRank; buttons for Image, Froogle, Groups, News, and Site searches; Spell Check for forms; an automatic form filler; Autolink to create Google Maps from addresses; and a Blog This button. Some of these features are not enabled by default but can be easily added when selecting “options” from the drop-down menu beneath the main “Google” button.

By the way, after installing this toolbar, I used the “customize” option seen when right-clicking on the main toolbar area and was able to drag away the default Firefox search box in the upper right, as it was somewhat redundant once the Google Toolbar was installed. However, that search box allows for the use of multiple search sites, so I may yet add it back for its flexibility.

Google Currency Conversion

googleGoogle Blog reports that Google’s calculator feature now supports currency conversion. This is a pretty useful feature, as it doesn’t require you to navigate away from the search page or toolbar, and it allows for plain language searches [1 dollar in pounds]. However, sites like The Universal Currency Converter and Yahoo!’s Currency Converter are more comprehensive; I found that Google couldn’t handle Ukrainian currency, for example [1 dollar in hryvni].

Vice Admiral James Stockdale Dead At 81

I think MonkeyFilter summarizes the recent death of Vice Admiral Stockdale very well:

A real James Bond calls it quits. Vice Admiral James Bond StockdaleDecorated vet, POW, Perot VP candidate, Epictetus scholar, Illinois native and all around tough motherfucker, died yesterday from complications related to Alzheimers. He was 81.

I thought it was a real shame that he became “the butt of jokes after he opened the 1992 vice presidential debate by asking, ‘Who am I? Why am I here?’,” because it was not for lack of presence or intelligence:

“The questions were relevant in terms of the evening’s purpose, which was to introduce myself and let the American people know where I was coming from,” he wrote in 1995. “But I also chose them for their broader relevance to my life: I am a philosopher.”