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<font face="Arial">The high level button sounds good to me.<br>
It's always there, but not in anybody's way.<br>
<br>
Yes indeed, I remember the Netscape Meteors Logo<br>
It said something to me,<br>
It said:<br>
</font>
<ul>
<li><font face="Arial">I'm not afraid of innovation</font></li>
<li><font face="Arial">You can do what <b>you</b> want with this
product</font></li>
</ul>
<font face="Arial">That feeling was reinforced when I happened on
the Newsgroup Netscape.test.multimedia (AOL Server)<br>
These folks did wonderfully innovative things with Newsgroup
posts/email when most said it couldn't be done.<br>
<br>
That's what it's all about in my book<br>
The freedom to do what <b>you</b> want to do with your email<br>
<br>
And we should try to make that freedom of expression easier.<br>
<br>
JoeS1<br>
<br>
And that coincides perfectly with the Mozilla Manifesto<br>
</font>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 10/23/2014 5:34 PM, Axel Grude
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:5449745E.70905@gmail.com" type="cite">1. takes
very little screen space<br>
2. is immediately understood as a command (could be jump to
donation page or subscribe to pro version)<br>
3. is permanent. I highly recommend making it a color so it sticks
out a little. maybe even a subtle but cool animation (does anybody
remember netscape) every 20 minutes that can be disabled. It
should also "echo" the color / or logo of the landing page so it
is understood as an "extension" of the Thunderbird identity.<br>
4. Can be removed for the "subscribed version"<br>
5. If it is top right or top left it is in a visual hot spot</blockquote>
<br>
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