Provided by: libclipboard-perl_0.13-1_all bug

NAME

       clipbrowse - Load a URL from the clipboard into your browser.

USAGE

       # ...copy something # (You might want to do a `clipjoin` if the URL text is messy) $
       clipbrowse

       Remember that many browsers will usefully load things that don't look like URL's. For
       example Firefox does a Google "I'm feeling lucky" with non-URLs.  This means you can have
       any text in your clipboard and `clipbrowse`.

MOTIVATION

       It saves a couple of seconds every time you run it.  Chrome and Firefox, for examples,
       automatically create a new tab and loads the page when you invoke it from the command
       line.  Already we've saved a Ctrl+T and a Shift+Insert.  When you consider the
       parallelizing (that your browser will be actively loading the page while you're
       Alt+Tabbing to it), you've squeaked out a little more.

       Maybe I'm just a freak, but I like shaving out wasted time like that.

CONFIGURATION

       The environment variable $BROWSER will override the default launching command.  If you
       have a %s in the line, it will be replaced with the url.  if not, the url will be appended
       at the end.

       The default is `chromium-browser "%s"` (Debian's Google Chrome) If you still use Firefox,
       consider: `firefox -remote "openURL(%s,new-tab)"'`.

AUTHOR

       Ryan King <rking@panoptic.com> =head1 COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2010.  Ryan King.  All rights reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.

       See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>