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Nine Tools That Let You Randomly Browse The Web - CNET

The document discusses nine tools that allow random web browsing, including StumbleUpon, Mangle, Delicious Randomizer, DiggBar, the Google Toolbar, Minthink, That Random Website, Random Website, and Web-O-Random. StumbleUpon recommends sites based on user ratings while Mangle lets you browse sites, images and maps randomly. Delicious Randomizer takes you to recently bookmarked links. DiggBar chooses from front page stories while Google Toolbar uses browsing history. Minthink and the random websites provide true random links to explore the unknown corners of the web.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Nine Tools That Let You Randomly Browse The Web - CNET

The document discusses nine tools that allow random web browsing, including StumbleUpon, Mangle, Delicious Randomizer, DiggBar, the Google Toolbar, Minthink, That Random Website, Random Website, and Web-O-Random. StumbleUpon recommends sites based on user ratings while Mangle lets you browse sites, images and maps randomly. Delicious Randomizer takes you to recently bookmarked links. DiggBar chooses from front page stories while Google Toolbar uses browsing history. Minthink and the random websites provide true random links to explore the unknown corners of the web.

Uploaded by

Fakta Retail
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Nine tools that let you randomly browse the Web - CNET

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Culture

Nine tools that let you randomly browse the Web


Yourto guide
Want to Web
browse the a better future
at random? We've got a small selection of tools that let you do it with speed and
true unknowing.

Josh Lowensohn
April 7, 2009 11:50 a.m. PT
4 min read

Digg's release of a pervasive, software-free toolbar last week brought with it a sweet
little surprise: the capability to jump to a random site or story that was recommended
by other Digg users. For a site that's run entirely by its community, this puts the power
of browsing in the hands of an algorithm that does the deciding for you. Digg wasn't
the first site to do this, though. So what are some other tools that let you randomly
explore the Web? I've put together a few of my favorites below.

StumbleUpon: Calling StumbleUpon just a random site generator may not be fair.
While it does a great job of taking you to random sites, most of its links have been
vetted by a large user base of people who go through and weed out some of the bad
or outdated stuff. It's also got a built-in recommendation engine that will tune its
"stumbles" to your tastes as you give sites a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down.

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Nine tools that let you randomly browse the Web - CNET

In addition to being able to use the site with a special toolbar that remains no matter
what site you're on, you can get a similar experience right from StumbleUpon's site,
which brings with it a software-free toolbar. You can also access StumbleUpon for
sites, and video on various gaming consoles, including the Nintendo Wii, for which
StumbleUpon coded a special version of the site to work with the Wii's remote and
your living room's TV set.

Mangle: Next to StumbleUpon, Mangle is one of the oldest sites on this list, having
launched in early 2002. While it's not much to look at, it does a good job of letting you
randomly hop to big sites, personal pages, images, and even maps. You can access
all these verticals either through bookmarks, or by installing Mangle's browser toolbar,
which also throws in the option to show random sites that match up with keywords
you've entered. Worth noting, however, is that the toolbar hasn't been updated in a
while, so it won't work with the latest version of Firefox.

Delicious Randomizer: Delicious may be all about organization (which some people
take to an obsessive compulsive level), but it's also got a wild side. It has a random
links feature that will take you to a link that's either recently been created or
bookmarked by another Delicious user. You can click on it again and again, and it will
give you random results based on the pulse of the site. To do it, just save this link to
your bookmarks toolbar or bookmarks list.

CNET Networks

DiggBar: Digg's software-free toolbar has a large, orange random button, which as you
might guess, takes you to a random page. Where Digg differs from some of the other

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Nine tools that let you randomly browse the Web - CNET

services on this list though, is that all stories or sites it takes you to have been featured
on the front page of Digg.com. This may keep you from finding some real undiscovered
gems, but for the casual user you at least know you're being taken to something
worthy of a quick look.

Rolling the dice takes you to a new site based on topical sites you've visited recently.
CNET

Google Toolbar: Users with the Google Toolbar installed can add on a special random
page button that goes to a random site recommended by Google based on your past
browsing history. It looks at what you've been searching for, and pulls up 50 related
links, which it cycles through at random whenever you click the button. You can also
hop to one of its suggestions by choosing from a drop-down menu, although the first
option is way more fun.

If you don't feel like giving Google more of your browser than it already has, you can
accomplish the same thing with this Firefox add-on, which also feeds from the same
list.

Minthink: Minthink generates a random site to go to with the press of a button. What's
nice about this one compared to some of the rest is that if you're accessing it from its
standard site, you can preview what the URL is before you click on it. However, if
you're a Firefox user and feeling bold, there's an extension, and a script for Ubiquity
that will take you directly to the site without you knowing what it is first.

That Random Website: This one may not be well and truly random since it's working
off a database, but the folks behind it were smart enough to see the success of the
Million Dollar Homepage and go for something similar by selling off slots at $1 a pop
(which goes to charity). Every time you visit it or hit the refresh button in the browser
it'll take you somewhere new, along with the option to hop back to That Random

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Nine tools that let you randomly browse the Web - CNET

Website's homepage which makes it feel like a Web ring of yore.

Random Website: (not to be confused with That Random Website) lets you click on a
giant face to be hurtled towards a new site. You can also add any of your own URLs to
its database, which will go out to other users after being approved by its creators.
There's no fancy toolbar, but you can save its bookmark, which will open up a random
site in a new browser tab.

Web-O-Random is another service on that list that isn't the prettiest, but it makes up for
it with neat AJAX tricks. It will load up random pages in a frame on the bottom of the
page with slick fades. It also has a carousel of alternate links if you want to control
your destiny a bit more. Technology demo aside, I ran into some problems with it
spitting out pages that either weren't alive anymore, or weren't in English, which may
not be a problem if you've got Google Translate handy.

Any we missed? Leave them in the comments.

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