I would say that more technical people are even less likely to right click on a web page. They don't expect the context menu to provide options particular to the site out of experience and have developed shortcut key habits and simply have no need for the menu.
- Trevor
On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 10:38 PM, Jared Zimmerman < jared.zimmerman@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Max,
I think its interesting and probably useful to power users, but not very discoverable, I wonder how many non-technical folks ever even right click on webpages...
*Jared Zimmerman * \ Director of User Experience \ Wikimedia Foundation M : +1 415 609 4043 | : @JaredZimmermanhttps://twitter.com/JaredZimmerman
On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 3:52 PM, Shahyar Ghobadpour < sghobadpour@wikimedia.org> wrote:
No browsers except Firefox (and other Gecko-based ones) currently support the HTML5 contextmenu attribute. So, it works for their own Firefox addons site, but it isn't particularly useful for us.
--Shahyar
On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 7:47 AM, Max max@koehler-kn.de wrote:
hey everyone, I just came across this cute little thing the folks on mozilla developer network are doing: They include links to their history and edit pages in the browser's context menu. https://www.dropbox.com/s/7xctszwdjvtui79/Screenshot%202014-03-22%2015.35.39...
Thought I'd share this.
best, max @awesomephant
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