Internet Explorer | here's the thing https://heresthethingblog.com Making sense of gadgets and technology Thu, 25 Jan 2018 22:10:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.2 https://heresthethingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/FB_icon_500x500-copy-130x130.jpg Internet Explorer | here's the thing https://heresthethingblog.com 32 32 Browser tip: Set multiple “home” or “start” pages for your web browser https://heresthethingblog.com/2014/06/24/browser-tip-set-multiple-home/ https://heresthethingblog.com/2014/06/24/browser-tip-set-multiple-home/#respond Tue, 24 Jun 2014 15:25:45 +0000 http://heresthethingblog.com/?p=19714 Ever wish you could set more than just one home page for your favorite web browser? Well, you can. In fact, you can set any of the four major browsers—Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Safari—to load as many “home” or “start” pages as you like, all in separate browser tabs. Here’s how… For Google Chrome: […]

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Ever wish you could set more than just one home page for your favorite web browser? Well, you can.

In fact, you can set any of the four major browsers—Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Safari—to load as many “home” or “start” pages as you like, all in separate browser tabs.

Here’s how…

Chrome startup page settings

Chrome will let you add as many “startup” tabs as you like.

For Google Chrome:

  • Click the menu button in the top-right corner of the Chrome interface (it’s the one marked with three short horizontal lines), then select Settings.
  • Find the “On startup” section, click the “Open a specific page or set of pages” button, then click the “Set pages” link.
  • Fill in the blank next to “Add a new page” with a web address (URL) you want Chrome to open when it first starts up, then click OK. Want more pages to open? Just keep adding URLs one at a time, or click the “Use current pages” button to automatically add the browser tabs you already have open.
  • Done adding tabs? Click the OK button once more, then quit Chrome and start it up again.
  • Presto! All the pages you just entered should start loading automatically.
Firefox home page settings

Just open the tabs you want Firefox to load as it starts and click the “Use Current Pages” button.

For Firefox:

  • Launch a new Firefox window, then open tabs for all the pages you’d like Firefox to open when it first starts up.
  • Click the Firefox menu and select Preferences (on a Mac), or click Tools, Options (on a PC), then click the General tab.
  • Make sure the “When Firefox starts” option is set to “Show my home page,” then click the “Use Current Pages” button under the blank labeled “Home Page.”
  • Close the settings window, quick Firefox, open it again … and there you go.
Internet Explorer home page settings

Keep adding URLs to the “home page” field to load multiple tabs when Internet Explorer starts.

For Internet Explorer:

  • Open the Tools menu (it’s the gear-shaped button in the upper-right corner of the browser interface), select Internet Options, then click the General tab.
  • You should see a big “Home page” form at the top of the Internet Options window. Start entering the web addresses you want to load as tabs when you start Internet Explorer, or click the “Use current” button if you’ve already got the tabs open in a browser window.
  • In the “Startup” section, make sure “Start with home page” is selected.
  • Click the Apply button, quit IE, launch it again, then sit back and watch as your tabs load.
Safari startup tab settings

You’ll need to create and then select a bookmarks folder to make Safari load multiple tabs when it launches.

For Safari:

  • Open a new Safari window, then create tabs for all the pages you’d like to load when the browser first starts.
  • Open the Bookmarks menu, then select “Add Bookmarks for These (x) Tabs.” You’ll need to pick a name for your the bookmarks folder you’re about to create; you might want to choose “Startup tabs,” or another easy-to-remember name.
  • Next, open the Safari menu and select Preferences, then click the General tab.
  • Find the “Safari opens with” setting and select “A new window” from the pull-down menu.
  • Then, for the “New windows open with” setting, select “Choose tabs folder,” then select the folder you just created in the window that appears.
  • Quit Safari, launch it again, and you’ll see your startup tabs waiting for you.

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https://heresthethingblog.com/2014/06/24/browser-tip-set-multiple-home/feed/ 0 Chrome startup page settings Chrome will let you add as many "startup" tabs as you like. Firefox home page settings Just open the tabs you want Firefox to load as it starts and click the "Use Current Pages" button. Internet Explorer home page settings Safari startup tab settings You'll need to create and then select a bookmarks folder to make Safari load multiple tabs when it launches.
Windows/Mac tip: How to choose your default web browser https://heresthethingblog.com/2012/08/24/windowsmac-tip-choose-default/ https://heresthethingblog.com/2012/08/24/windowsmac-tip-choose-default/#respond Fri, 24 Aug 2012 14:21:16 +0000 http://heresthethingblog.com/?p=11977 Sick of having Internet Explorer pop up when you really wanted another browser, like Chrome, Firefox or Safari? I know the feeling. Both Windows and Mac systems will open a specific, so-called “default” web browser whenever you click a link in your email client or another, non-browser program. For a fresh-out-of-the-box Windows PC, the default […]

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Sick of having Internet Explorer pop up when you really wanted another browser, like Chrome, Firefox or Safari? I know the feeling.

Both Windows and Mac systems will open a specific, so-called “default” web browser whenever you click a link in your email client or another, non-browser program.

For a fresh-out-of-the-box Windows PC, the default browser will invariably be Microsoft’s own Internet Explorer, while Apple’s Safari browser is the default browser for new Mac systems.

Of course, any time you open a different browser, like Google Chrome or Firefox, they’ll tempt you with the prospect of making them your default browser—and eventually, you may lose track of which browser is the default at a given moment.

If only there were a single, centralized place on PCs and Macs where you could set your default web browser once and for all, right?

Luckily, there is.

For Windows:

Choose a default web browser for Windows

Just select your favorite browser for Windows and click “Set this program as default.”

  • Click the Start menu, select the Control Panel link, click the big green “Programs” heading, then click “Set your default programs.”
  • A window will appear with a big list of programs that you can set as the “default” for various functions, from email and photo viewers to MP3 players and (yes) web browsers. All the web browsers installed on your PC will be at the top of the list; go ahead and click your favorite one.
  • Click the “Set this program as default” option at the bottom of the window. (A second option, “Choose defaults for this program,” lets you pick and choose which types of web files a given browser will open by default; unless you’re an advanced user, I recommend you skip this one.)
  • Click the “OK” button. That’s it!

For Mac:

Choose a default web browser for Mac

Want to pick a new default browser on your Mac? You’ll find the controls in Safari’s preferences menu.

  • Open the Safari web browser, click the Safari menu at the top of the screen, then select Preferences.
  • Under the General tab, the very first option should be “Default web browser.” Click the drop down menu, then select a browser that you’d like to designate as the default. (You may see other programs in the list that aren’t web browsers, by the way, so choose carefully.)
  • Close the Preferences menu. All done!

Click here for more Windows tips, or click here for help with your Mac.

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https://heresthethingblog.com/2012/08/24/windowsmac-tip-choose-default/feed/ 0 Choose a default web browser for Windows Just select your favorite browser for Windows and click "Set this program as default." Choose a default web browser for Mac Want to pick a new default browser on your Mac? You'll find the controls in Safari's preferences menu.