Hey, this looks pretty cool, actually. One powerful addition which I think is necessary in order to adopt this is the addition of a Keep button in that toolbar, by which one *could* download the pdf for offline reading later if wanted.
In a similar vein, would it be possible to create a supplemental toolbar like this for other media types which browse specifically supports? I could see having a similar UI for images, and a perhaps for audio and video, too. The ability to view various formats directly, yet also have a one-click means to download the file, sounds promising. - Eben PS. While I agree this is a nice thing to support in Browse, we'll need to make this change very clear, as teachers and kids are familiar with the current behavior which automatically downloads any .pdf clicked on. We wouldn't want to confuse them when it doesn't appear in their Journal directly. On Tue, Oct 7, 2008 at 6:46 PM, Sayamindu Dasgupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > > It looks like reading PDF files from the web via Browse is a pain, > since, Browse saves the file to Journal, and then one has to go to the > Journal and open up the saved file via Read (#8330). Can we treat PDF > files like we handle media files (oggs mostly) by means of a Browse > plugin ? > I took a look at this during the weekend, and came up with a hack > which looks like > http://dev.laptop.org/~sayamindu/Screenshot_browse_pdf.png > I used mozplugger and a simple PDF viewer using the Evince python > bindings to make my work simpler. > Can this be a possible workaround till we find a better solution ? > > Thanks, > Sayamindu > > > -- > Sayamindu Dasgupta > [http://sayamindu.randomink.org/ramblings] > _______________________________________________ > Sugar mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/sugar > _______________________________________________ Sugar mailing list [email protected] http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/sugar

