In Firefox, one of the awesome bar's awesome tricks is guessing what URL you meant to type.
It does it by querying Google and using the Browse By Name search feature to take you directly to a
site.
For instance if I just type http, Firefox can't find anything definitive in the history for just that part of a
URL, so it kicks it over to the keyword search. Google takes you to the top search result for that
keyword, which is the wikipedia article on HyperText Transport Protocol.
But if you don't like Google you can change that. Here's how.
Type about:config in the location bar and press return.
This takes you to a warning asking you to be careful. Do be careful. Once you're sure you mean it,
press the I'll be careful, promise button.
now type keyword.URL into the box marked Filter.
Double-click on keyword.URL and a dialog box will pop up with a Google URL in it.
This is the URL the Awesome bar uses to do a search when it can't make sense of what you typed.
I suggest saving that URL somewhere, in case you want it back. Though it is currently in the article for
keyword.URL at MozillaZine.org.
In the text box replace the URL with whatever search engine you'd rather use.
For this example let's use Bing.
Press OK.
Now go to the awesome bar and for a test type http again.
Instead of taking you to the wiki article, it gives you bing search results for http.
You can change the keyword search to hit other sites as well.
For instance, Scroogle is a site that returns Google results without your IP address being logged or
cookies being set.
And Nathan Thompson, Class of 2011 emailed me about how he's using CNET search to power his
keyword lookup in Firefox. He just uses the cnet.com search string and ends it after query=.
That my friends will give you a few more options to tweak your Firefox awesome bar's awesomeness.
I'm Tom Merritt, CNET.com