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Using the Seamless Web in Windows 8 : Browsing and Searching the Web—with Touch and Without (part 1) - Using the Address Bar

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12/5/2012 9:32:50 AM
What could be better than a smart, fast, immersive browsing experience that you can use with a touch device to tap and pinch your way across the web? If you’re a fan of the smartphone, chances are that you’re already browsing using a touch interface, so the Metro version of IE10 may feel very natural to you.

The Metro experience is smooth, slick, and fast if you want to search and browse and read to your heart’s content. But if you long for more control—and your old, familiar browser tools—you can easily display the webpage in desktop mode by tapping or clicking Tools in the Metro IE10 version and choosing View on the Desktop.

>>>step-by-step: Using the Address Bar

As you type in the address bar, the navigation tiles filter to show you sites from your history, favorites, and even popular URLs. With Windows 8 roaming and connected accounts, your browsing history and favorites roam with you so that you can easily access recent webpages across all of your PCs.

1. Click or tap in the address bar. If you’re using a touch device, the touch keyboard appears so that you can type the new web address. If you’re using a non-touch computer, the web address is highlighted.

2. Type the web address of the page you want to view. Internet Explorer 10 attempts to autocomplete the phrase for you, so if you want to use the site provided, tap or click the Go button. If not, just keep typing the full address.

3. You can also tap or click a tile in the Frequent area to move to the page in IE10 Metro.

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4. If you’re using the desktop version, IE10 offers suggested sites in a dropdown list when you begin to type the web address, and you can tap or click the site you want to display.

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What’s in a Name?

In the desktop version of IE10, the address bar is known as One Box, where you now basically use “one box” for everything, whether you want to search, get security reports, or go directly to a web page.



>>> Go Further: Keyboard Shortcuts for Browsing

If you’d rather skip the clicking and navigate through the web using your keyboard, you can use the following shortcut keys in the desktop version of IE10:

• Press Alt+C to display your favorites, feeds, and history.

• Press Ctrl+B to organize your favorites.

• Press Ctrl+D to add another web page to your favorites.

• Press Ctrl+L to highlight the web address in One Box. (This also works in the Metro version of IE10.)

• Press Ctrl+J to display the Download Manager.


Navigating the Web

You’ll probably find the browser tools for moving from one web page to another pretty easy to use, whether you’re working with the Metro or desktop version of IE10. Chances are that you already know how to move forward or backward from page to page.

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Whether you’re using Metro or desktop IE10, you’ll use the same tools and techniques to navigate the webpages you display:

Back. Clicking the Back button takes you back to the page you were previously viewing.

Forward. Clicking Forward takes you to the web page you previously viewed after viewing the current one. This capability is helpful if you’re moving back and forth between pages. If you haven’t moved ahead to another page yet, this button is not active.

Click or tap a link. Click or tap a link on the page to move to another page or perform a web action. What that link does—for example, whether it displays a new page, opens a document, or plays a media clip—depends on what the website designer programmed the link to do.

Scroll or swipe down the page. In the desktop version of IE10, use the vertical scrollbar as you would in any other program to display content that is currently out of view along the bottom of the page. On a touch device, you can swipe up to display content that appears below the bottom margin of the window.

Scroll or swipe across the page. In the desktop version of IE10, use the horizontal scrollbar to scroll across pages that are too wide to be displayed at one time on your monitor. With Metro IE10, you can swipe to the left to show content that is out of view to the right.

Tap or click a tool or command. You can carry out site operations, execute commands, and access other areas of the site by tapping or clicking a button, command, or menu item.


>>> Go Further: Pin Your Sites Where You Can Find Them Later

If you are constantly wishing you had a better way to remember the sites you like to visit frequently, IE10 Metro has a great feature for you: pinned sites. Now you can pin a site to your Windows 8 Start menu so that you can access the site as soon as you start using Windows 8.

To pin a site to the Windows 8 Start screen, simply navigate to the site you want to add, swipe up to display the address bar, and tap Pin to Start (which resembles a push pin) to the right of the address bar. IE10 Metro adds the site as a tile to your Windows 8 Start screen, and you’ll be able to access this site directly without first opening Internet Explorer.



>>> Go Further: Who Says You Can’t Go Back?

Internet Explorer 10 makes it easy to return to sites you browsed earlier—or go back to your last browsing session. If you’re using the Metro version of IE10, simply swipe up to display the address bar and the navigation tiles. Tap or click the tile you want to view.

If you’re using the desktop version of IE10, click the New Tab box to the right of the last tab open in your browsing window, and, if you want to revisit earlier sites, click Reopen Closed Tabs. A list of sites you visited earlier appears. Just click the site you want to display.

If you want to return to your last browsing session, click the Reopen Last Session link, and Internet Explorer automatically opens the web page you were visiting the last time you used the browser.

 
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