Thunderbird is not a website but a "real" application, and besides
that: when you have both a Chrome "application" and a default Chrome
window running, your link will open as a new tab in the default Chrome
window. Chris wants it in a third window (am I right Chris?).

- Stefan

On 4 feb, 13:53, skilledbachelor <[email protected]> wrote:
> With the current production version (1.0.154.48 and before) you can
> get what you want by creating a CHROME version of Thunderbird as an
> "application shortcut".
>
> That way the default (and only) operation is to open a new window when
> a link is clicked..
>
> I've been using this technique for gmail, Google Reader, Google
> Calendar and Google Docs for several months now and would be very
> disappointed if it changes.
>
> Regards ... Alex
>
> On Feb 4, 6:39 am, Chris Withers <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Jim Davis wrote:
> > > Each Chrome "tab" is actually a different process and therefore really a
> > > "new window".  
>
> > I know this already...
>
> > > You can detach the tab to look like a different window by
> > > hovering on the tab for a few seconds or just dragging the tab.  
>
> > I know this too, but you're ignoring the point.
> > When I click on a link in an app such as Thunderbird, I don't want
> > another tab in an existing window. I want a new window.
>
> > Firefox has had this as a configurable option (with the option I want as
> > the default) for years now...
>
> > I don't care what processes there are, this is a UI thing, not a
> > functional thing...
>
> > Chris
>
> > --
> > Simplistix - Content Management, Zope & Python Consulting
> >             -http://www.simplistix.co.uk
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