> I'm guessing you have your window manager configured to render window > shadows. In this case, this is less plausible, yup, unless you do the > inverted gradient trick.
Ah, reminds me. On Windows 7, the blue border fill is actually a gradient like other window borders, just remembered it used to be pretty simplistic. Don't know if this is a Windows 7 thing or a Chrome update (got Chrome 8.0 here). > I tried to dig something up, but couldn't. But we definitely had these > around 2001-2003, culminating in browsers removing the ability to do > location=no in window.open(). Yeah, got the idea. Had the impression you forgot to link to your preferred/specific example. Cheers, Chris. On Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 11:06 PM, Michal Zalewski <[email protected]>wrote: > > 1) Yup, pretty unconvincing. Though one could separate window shadows, > > I'm guessing you have your window manager configured to render window > shadows. In this case, this is less plausible, yup, unless you do the > inverted gradient trick. > > > 2) Where is "here"? :) > > I tried to dig something up, but couldn't. But we definitely had these > around 2001-2003, culminating in browsers removing the ability to do > location=no in window.open(). > > /mz >
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