Ubiquity | The New Firefox Extension
Posted on August 28th, 2008 in News |
Ubiquity us the new Firefox extension known as with a similar feel to Launch or Executor the “type and find” desktop applications, but it runs within the browser and is more of social networking enhancement than a simple launcher. You can highlight a locality you have typed in an email, type “map” and you will have a map to paste in your message.

You can even translate on-page, search amazon, google, wikipedia, yahoo, youtube, etc.; digg and twitter; lookup and insert yelp review; get the weather; syntax highlight any code you find; and a lot more.
Mozilla Labs introduces experiment into connecting the Web with language in an attempt to find new user interfaces that could make it possible for everyone to do common Web tasks more quickly and easily.
The overall goals of Ubiquity are to explore how best to:
- Empower users to control the web browser with language-based instructions. (With search, users type what they want to find. With Ubiquity, they type what they want to do.)
- Enable on-demand, user-generated mashups with existing open Web APIs. (In other words, allowing everyone–not just Web developers–to remix the Web so it fits their needs, no matter what page they are on, or what they are doing.)
- Use Trust networks and social constructs to balance security with ease of extensibility.
- Extend the browser functionality easily.
