On Sat, 2005-08-20 at 09:55 -0400, John Ellson wrote: > Rodd Clarkson wrote: > Personally I like that applications open tabs in an existing browser if > available. > I don't think it will take long for users to adjust to this idea. > > However, I do agree that opening multiple tabs from the same application > is a pain. There should be some support for named "targets" such that > an application > can reuse a tab that it had previously opened. IMHO. Okay, maybe I didn't explain myself. My problem is not with these links opening in a tab, it's with these links opening in a browser on another workspace leaving no clear indication that something has happened, and also leaving the user with a search for the browser window that the page opened in. Consider a situation where the user has half a dozen browser windows opened on other desktops and then has to search each desktop to find out which one the link opened in. This is insane. If there is no browser window on the current desktop, then firefox should open a window on that desktop. If this can't be done, then firefox should just open in a new window each time. The current behavior is crazy. What happens when you click on a link should be obvious and easy to access. You shouldn't have to know you might have to search your other desktops for the results, because the outcome should be on that desktop. This sort of thing can be done on the gnome desktop. Consider the behavior of gedit when opening a file. If gedit already has a window open on the desktop, double clicking a file on the desktop will open it in a new tab inside the gedit window on that desktop (not in gedit windows on other desktops). If gedit doesn't have a window open on that desktop, it open one, even if other gedit windows exist on other desktops. Try it. Firefox should do the same thing. Rodd -- "It's a fine line between denial and faith. It's much better on my side" -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list