--- a/src/doc/user/usermanual.sgml
+++ b/src/doc/user/usermanual.sgml
@@ -479,24 +479,32 @@
<sect1 id="rcl.indexing.beaglequeue">
<title>Using Beagle WEB browser plugins</title>
- <para><application>Beagle</application> is a concurrent desktop
+ <para><application>Beagle</application> is (was?) a concurrent desktop
indexer, built on Lucene and the Mono project (C#), for which a
number of add-on browser plugins were written. These work by
copying visited web pages to an indexing queue directory, which the
- indexer then processes.</para>
+ indexer then processes. Especially, there is a
+ <application>Firefox</application> extension.</para>
<para>If, for any reason, you so happen to prefer &RCL; to
- <application>Beagle</application>, you can still use
- the browser plugins (they are written in Javascript and completely
- independant of C#, Beagle, Lucene...). &RCL; can process the
- <application>Beagle</application> queue directory. Of course, this
- supposes that <application>Beagle</application> is not running,
- else both programs will fight for the same files.</para>
+ <application>Beagle</application>, you can still use the
+ <application>Firefox</application> plugin, which is written in
+ Javascript and completely independant of C#, Beagle, Lucene..., and
+ set &RCL; to process the <application>Beagle</application> queue
+ directory. This supposes that <application>Beagle</application> is
+ not running, else both programs will fight for the same
+ files.</para>
<para>This feature can be enabled in the GUI indexing configuration
panel, or by editing the configuration file (set
<literal>processbeaglequeue</literal> to 1).</para>
- </sect1>
+
+ <para>There are more recent instructions about how to find and
+ install the <application>Firefox</application> extension on the
+ <ulink url="https://bitbucket.org/medoc/recoll/wiki/IndexBeagleWeb">
+ Recoll wiki</ulink>.</para>
+
+ </sect1>
<sect1 id="rcl.indexing.periodic">
<title>Periodic indexing</title>