Laptop users: how do you surf the dope with Firefox

One of my favorite Firefox features is the ability to open new pages as new tabs, but with my laptop, that operation requires two hands. Is there any easy way to use the touchpad/mouse buttons to open new tabs with one hand?

I’m sure many dopers use laptops with the Firefox browser to surf the net, I’m wondering whether I’m the only dumb SOB trying to hold down ctrl and manipulate the touchpad at the same time. What shortcuts do you have set up on your machine to make browsing easier?

I have a Mac Laptop. With my Mac I just hold the mouse button down over the link and a menu pops up with that option.

BTW, I realize that I could right click and select “open in new tab”, I’m looking for more of a shortcut.

If you just want to open a new blank tab, control-T.

Otherwise, just left-click and ‘open in new tab’.

See if your touchpad driver can emulate middle-button-click (e.g., when you click both touchpad buttons, or when you tap a corner of the touchpad). Mozilla can then interpret the middle click as “open new tab.”

There’s an extension that installs Mouse Gestures for you.

I haven’t played with it much, but it’s been invaluable as far as fwd and back browsing goes, plus closing existing tabs and so forth.

The only problem I have is that I can’t just, say, print out a cheat sheet of the existing mappings to refer to (and there are a LOT!).

I manage to use the right-click button on my laptop with no trouble.

Just a side note on this, if you do set a corner to a right or middle click, it may require a slightly longer ‘click’ than normal to work.

Thanks Omphaloskeptic, that sounds like what I’d like to do. Middle click is what I use on my desktop machine.
How would someone look into whether his laptop can emulate the middle click on a two button touchpad?

One of the easiest ways to open a new tab is just to drag the link to the tab bar. You may need to go to the Advanced section of Options and tell Firefox that it should always leave the tab bar visible, even if there is only one page open.

And I have to confess, I use a small (Labtec) cordless mouse most of the time with my laptop. Touchpads and keysticks are OK for emergencies, but mice are what I’m used to, and work fastest with.

I don’t have my laptop handy to check, but I think the settings should be in some tab under Control Panel > Mouse, if suitable drivers are installed. If they aren’t installed, you might be able to find updated drivers from the touchpad or laptop manufacturer, or on a CD that came with the laptop. (Adding new drivers may affect the way the laptop works with mice, though.)