Ok, some thoughts.

On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 12:49 PM Akkana Peck <akk...@shallowsky.com> wrote:

>
> I wasn't sure either, but it's worth noting that the libreoffice
> download page at
> http://www.libreoffice.org/download/libreoffice-fresh/?version=5.0.1
> (I'm not sure if that's the same page as the one Andrew likes --
> different URL) doesn't need javascript or jquery for OS detection.
> Even with noscript, it correctly shows me a download button for Linux
> x86. Presumably it's doing server-side checking of the browser's
> User-Agent.
>
> Personally, I'd be fine with Pat's suggestion of just having links
> at the top, but server-side user agent detection is a nice touch.
>

It seems everyone is a fan of this, so I'll spend some time finding an
optimal way to do this.  I'll start with styling the base page, and then
progressively enhance it with OS detection.


> On the Downloads page, the page content is responsive but the image
> at the top forces the page to 900px wide. Maybe that's what Andrew
> is talking about? The rest of the site is very responsive.
>

It's actually the MD5 hashes in the table that are causing the page to be
wider.  I'm going to modify that shortly to hopefully rectify it.


>
> One other issue: the webfonts in the toolbar at the top look awful
> in either Firefox or Chromium on Debian unstable. Debian seems to
> have a problem in general with rendering webfonts -- I've seen it
> on other pages that use them. Screenshot:
> http://shallowsky.com/tmp/gimp-news-screenshot.jpg


Thanks again for catching this.  We're working on it (as you know...) :)
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