What's to keep sites from spamming you?  What if they spam you and then
later you decide you want to install it anyway?
I guess I misunderstood the model of this feature.  Seeing the bit about the
rss feeds made me think that an app would use this to advertise that you
could install it.  I didn't realize that we were assuming the API would only
be called after a user action.  To be honest, I much prefer the rss feed way
of thinking about it.

I'm not a UI guy, though.  :-)

On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 12:32 PM, Ben Goodger (Google) <b...@chromium.org>wrote:

> As a result, I think we should have a dialog here. It's similar to what
> Firefox does, too.
> -Ben
>
> On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 12:31 PM, Brian Rakowski <br...@chromium.org>wrote:
>
>> In general, we've been operating under the assumption that a
>> user-initiated gesture ("click here to make gmail your mailto handler")
>> results in a dialog. Non-user-initiated (site intitiated) results in an
>> infobar. If you've denied the infobar this in the past, the site will have
>> to get you to click on something in its UI to prompt you for this again.
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 12:14 PM, Peter Kasting <pkast...@google.com>wrote:
>>
>>> On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 12:08 PM, Jeremy Orlow <jor...@chromium.org>wrote:
>>>
>>>> If you click no on an info bar, then how would you later change your
>>>> mind?
>>>
>>>
>>> I don't know.  Maybe at that point the icon appears in the address bar.
>>>
>>> PK
>>>
>>
>>
>> >>
>>
>

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