Hello,

Mozilla is coming up with a new Add-ons Manager UI for Firefox. I was asked
what Linux-specific stuff should be designed and how much should be
specified, because the look and feel depends on the DE's settings. I said
that all I can think of at that time is that it should follow the GTK+
"skinning" of XUL like how other XUL elements do it, because the Add-ons
Manager doesn't yet (in Firefox 4.0 Beta 4).
After looking at the Add-ons Manager a while ago, it looks like it's a bit
alienated in my GNOME desktop. Apparently, other than the lack of skinning,
it's because of the widgets (or however they should be called) that I don't
usually see on other apps. Perhaps, Firefox would fit more in the GNOME
desktop if it followed the UI Patterns.

Right now, the UI
Patterns<http://live.gnome.org/User%20Interface%20Patterns>could use
some help (see the
Etherpad <http://pad.ubuntu-uk.org/ui-patterns> page). In the future,
cross-platform apps can refer to it. Right now, correct me if I'm wrong, but
it seems that we can simply assess which UI elements are fit and not.

Should we encourage cross-platform apps like Firefox to follow GNOME's UI
Patterns? This *could* be an issue because GNOME isn't the only DE, so this
solution may not be beneficial for KDE and maybe environments.

Thoughts?


-- 
Regards,
Allan
http://www.google.com/profiles/AllanCaeg#about<http://www.google.com/profiles/allancaeg#about>
+63 918 948 2520
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