On 2/4/2011 2:29 PM, Glenn Maynard wrote:
2011/2/4 Ian Fette (イアンフェッティ) <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
> For instance, if a user has been using a site for months, uses it
frequently, and the site hits its 5GB limit but there's still 300GB
free on the drive, perhaps we just give the site another 5GB and give
the user a passive indication that we've done so, and let them do
something if they actually care.
That's interesting; reducing the amount users are nagged about things
that they probably don't care about is important. It would also need
to suppress prompting from calls to requestQuota if the quota increase
would have been allowed automatically.
https://developer.mozilla.org/En/Offline_resources_in_Firefox
" [html manifest] causes Firefox to display the notification bar the
first time the user loads your application"
In Firefox, the appCache manifest requires a passive indicator:
all new users receive one on their first page load, as a kind of
installation greeting.
It seems unnecessary for apps within the 5MB localStorage quota.