Firefox/Feature Brainstorming:Default Browser UI: Difference between revisions
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(additional reason for load images sub menu) |
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;Netscape Load All Images missing sub menu should be restored. | |||
May I point out that the View>View_Images(?) menu is missing in Firefox 2x. | |||
In Netscape the View>Load_Images(?) sub menu could load all of | |||
the images on the page without needing to click on each icon. | |||
<br><br> | |||
May I offer an additional reason why this menu should be restored | |||
to Firefox. When one uses search engines some sites with | |||
offensive naked pictures may embed keywords contained in the | |||
search criteria (eg. linux) causing the search engine to include | |||
a naked picture site along with desired search results containing | |||
penguins. After reading and approving the page text | |||
the user needs a single action to view all of the pictures. | |||
<br><br> | |||
For users who are surfing with | For users who are surfing with | ||
Load Images Automatically | Load Images Automatically | ||
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# show all images on this page | # show all images on this page | ||
# right-click: show this image | # right-click: show this image | ||
<br><br>May I ask you to please clarify where on the page the mouse pointer | |||
should be placed for these actions? How is the right click different | |||
from a default configuration left click over an image icon | |||
that causes the image to load and replace the icon? As I remember, | |||
in Netscape a right click over an image icon brings up a pop up image | |||
menu with choices such as copy image link, save image as, view image, etc. | |||
Did you mean to add the load all images sub menu to the right click pop up | |||
image menu when a right click happens over an image icon? | |||
<br><br> | |||
May I suggest since current Firefox distinguishes images from the server hosting the web page and images from other servers. There might properly be two view all images sub menu items: | |||
<br> Load_All_Images_from_Host_Server | |||
<br> Load_All_Images_from_Any_Server | |||
<br><br>Impact on code shold be minimal. | |||
The load image code is already in the browser | |||
so adding two sub menu items under view the view menu | |||
that call each kind of load image as a permanent part | |||
of the source tree would have negligible | |||
impact on source size, binary size, and maintainability. | |||
It should have no impact on performance if the load all | |||
images menu item is not selected. | |||
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Netscape for SuSE 7.3 Linux has a load all images menu option. | |||
Modern Knoppix live CD Iceweasel and Konqueror do not have this menu item. | |||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
Revision as of 08:55, 5 November 2007
CONTENTS:
- GUI features
- Menu features
- Toolbar features
- Button features
- Tab features
- Auto-complete features
- Other features
| GUI features | References |
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The greatest thing about Firefox (or Firefox 1.5 at least) is how incredibly simple it is. The gradients, colors, and glossiness of everything in Firefox 2 just creates visual overload. My head can't take it. "The visual appearance of an application is directly related to its acceptance by users." [1] There's a reason the Winestripe theme was downloaded 64,395 times in 1 month and 6 days. [2] | |
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Firefox's GUI runs so slow because of the use of GTK+. Please uses QT GUI which would make the browser faster. Additionally QT is more user-friendly, and had better GUI functions (I know its sound like a troll). It could be also possible to include easily FireFox in KDE (once using QT library). |
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As with OS X, Firefox on GTK+ OSs uses the same blocky widgets in webforms (to the point that a list box in a webform behaves differently than a listbox in the system.) | |
Use OS X's provided widget set, especially for textarea, button, radio, checkbox and select elements. Native widgets feature spell check among other niceties. This would go a long way towards making Firefox feel more like a "real" OS X application. The current UI does not follow many of the common idioms on the Mac which causes confusion when switching between it and other Apple apps. This could greatly impact adoption on OS X, particularly among less savvy users who don't understand why it's different.
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| Menu features | References |
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Often the number of buttons provided when you customize the toolbars is overwhelming. They should be grouped by category and extensions that add more buttons might add them to their own category or if aware choose the correct category to which to add the buttons. |
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I'd like to be able to set my menubars, bookmark bar, and (as an example) the Google toolbar to autohide. By this, I mean like the windows taskbar. This way I would be able to use that extra space for viewing, but wouldn't have to turn the bars on and off manually, or switch from the fullscreen mode. This idea could present a problem with being able to trigger the right bar for display, but I think if someone worked out the UI specifics for that, it would be a neat feature. |
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| Toolbar features | References |
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Customization:
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| Like proxy button!, Or perhaps pref buttons extensions. And maybe even "go up" |
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| Button features | References |
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| Middle click on back / forward already does this, but History is not preserved.
Related to: bug 18808 bug 189313 bug 246719 a detailed proposal here |
With rare exceptions, the Average User does not need access to both the reload and stop buttons at the same time. Combining them so they occupy the same space and "toggle," à la Safari, will free up real estate on the UI and reduce visual complexity.
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After a page has loaded the stop button grey's out and has no effect. In IE the stop button is always available and pressing it will halt animated gifs from animating. It would be good to go a step further and have pressing stop prevent animated gifs, embeded sound files, flash animations, video files etc from running. |
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In Firefox 2 the 'New Tab' button in the Navigation toolbar is not shown by default. One must 'customize' the toolbar. This is not ideal and does not promote the use of tabs. My mom was using Firefox for at least a year before I showed her that it had tabs!!! Tabs are extremely useful, so you might as well make that feature more easy to access (for new/basic users who don't know what tabs are or the keyboard shortcut to open a new tab.) |
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Home Page and Home button have been with us since forever. However, I have a strong feeling they are no longer relevant and no one uses them as they did in the old times of "web portals". I propose to create a task-oriented "start" pane - basically a question of "what do you want to do". It should have:
I consider Thunderbird's start pane to be a good example of what I'm talking about. |
| Tab features | References |
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Apart from the TAB navigation... it may be useful a option to choose an "inside-windows" navigation to move them freely all over firefox | |
This feature is mainly for people who tend to have a lot of tabs opened at the same time. You could add the ability for the user to see a numbering system on the far right of each tab over the close button (or the far left over the favicon) once the user presses the ctrl key on their keyboard which will make it easy to navigate through the tabs using ctrl + "The corresponding number" |
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Added by Operations on 09/09/07 |
EXAMPLES: |
Have the animated dots to the left of the page title on each tab be a visual representation of the page loading status. For example: 3/4 of the dots glowing will represent that only 3/4 of the page has loaded. Behaviour: Much like the status bar bottom right corner of the browser. |
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| Auto-complete features | References |
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If implemented, this proposal can boost productivity for web-application users with technically simple (and known from many text-processors/editors) UI add-on | |
Use heuristics to try and avoid caching sensitive data for autocompletion. For example, if something looks like a credit card number or social security number, don't cache it. It's very disconcerting to start typing in your social security number on your bank's Web site, and realize your browser already knows it... |
| Other features | References |
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SIMILAR EXAMPLES: |
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It could considerably improve the usage of keyboard shortcuts for new Firefox users that are not used to work with keyboard shortcuts (like old people). This should be a default-on feature with the option to turn off in Options -> Advanced -> General -> Accessibility | |
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Bug 108391 NoSquint extension (but per-domain is simplistic, as all pages on a domain to not follow the same style). Also requested in Firefox/Feature Brainstorming:Accessibility as "Font Deltas". |
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n/a |
(Adds feature to right click on main window when more than two windows are open)
(Adds undo feature to right click on main window when closing of multiple windows has occured) | |
| General tasks | |
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May I point out that the View>View_Images(?) menu is missing in Firefox 2x.
In Netscape the View>Load_Images(?) sub menu could load all of
the images on the page without needing to click on each icon.
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Netscape for SuSE 7.3 Linux has a load all images menu option. Modern Knoppix live CD Iceweasel and Konqueror do not have this menu item. |
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Highlight Current Site's Stored Password(s)
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Currently pressing ALT + 's' opens the 'History' menu. This is really annoying since a lot of board pages use the shortcut ALT + 's' to submit new posts. Workaround: Change to about:config and change the following values:
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- To break the current table (Why do we ever use tables? It's an absolute nightmare to edit!), I believe that CTRL-Highlight should let you select more than one part of the text in a page. This would be very handy. --FlyingIsFun1217 12:50, 4 November 2007 (PST)