Camino-Only Hints
Camino, although also based on Mozilla’s code, is somewhat different than the other three such browsers. It has a number of unique features, including the most Mac-looking interface of the bunch. Here are a few hints specific to Camino.
Copying Tabs
If you have a bunch of tabs open in Camino, you can do-si-do them around as follows:
If you drag an existing tab to the very edge of the tab bar (the empty part), using the small icon next to its name as a handle, you create a new tab of the same site, as illustrated in Figure 12-35.
Figure 12-35. Dragging the Apple tab to an empty area of the Camino toolbar (far left) creates a new tab displaying the same site. The idea of this feature, of course, is that it’s now easy to branch off to a second page of that same site, without having to hit the Back button.
If you drag the icon of one tab over another, you erase whatever’s in the second one and create a copy of the first.
If you drag a link from a Web page to the empty edge of the tab bar (or onto an existing tab), you create a new tab that opens the URL you just dragged into place.
Get Quick Access to Bookmarks via the Dock
If you’re like most people, you probably have a few Web sites that you visit every day—and wouldn’t it be convenient to have them in Camino’s Dock menu for easy activation from any program? Luckily, with a few mouse clicks in Camino, you can do just that, ...
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