From the silence, I infer that there is no way to disable the default interface.
So let me preface this by saying that I am rather incensed that sites are serving non-free code, and I see a tremendous utility in an extension such as librejs. But IMHO, this issue should be regarded as a bug, or at least as a severe usability concern. As you can tell by now, I am not an enemy of complaining, and I would love to start using librejs and to complain at the sites that serve non-free code. I am stopped, however, but the offered interface. 1. The torch blocks a portion of the page I am trying to browse. 2. The torch appears to be a part of the page I am trying to browse. I am not exactly confused, but should it really be that way? From where I sit it looks like the extension modifies the content of the page, but there is absolutely no reason why it should do so. 3. Almost every time I want to scroll down the page, the mouse cursor slides over the torch. It gets triggered, the thing slides out and starts animating. This is so obnoxious, I can hardly believe that anyone, including the devs, would use this. To sum up, drawing into the content is a very poor choice. Activating on mouse-over is even worse. Why not remove the torch and instead indicate the presence of non-free code by altering a toolbar button? When a user presses the toolbar button, the thing may slide out. On 02/01/2014 06:20 PM, Ivan Zaigralin wrote: > Is there a way to disable the torch slide-out thingy? In other words, > is there a way to run librejs without it drawing anything in the browser > window?
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
