Reviews for FireTray
291 reviews for this add-on
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Does just what it's supposed to. No bloat. Wish I'd looked for this plugin sooner.
Fedora 11-GNOME 2.26.3
Rated 2 out of 5 stars
глючит часто
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Latest version, working on my Gentoo amd64 - 0.1.11dev. Used it a couple of month with Thunderbird 2.0.x.
Now i'm install Thunderbird 3.0 beta and no one version of firetray working at all -(
Waiting fix for amd64!
Rated 1 out of 5 stars
There's a problem in Ubuntu, when restores the window, it restores in the workspace of the right.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 4 out of 5 stars
works on 32-bits for sb, but there's a bug with multi-desktop on ubuntu
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 3 out of 5 stars
Indeed, please fix. 64 bit, 9.10 Ubuntu.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 3 out of 5 stars
Please fix. 64 bit, 9.10 Ubuntu.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 1 out of 5 stars
PLEASE, fix this addon... I also am getting a segfault and crash. Using 64-bit version, 9.04, KDE 4.3.1,
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 3 out of 5 stars
It looks somehow better than New Mail Icon. However, I'm not using it because it's not only triggered by mails but by news as well and I don't want to be bugged whenever my RSS reader downloads something.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Broken on Ubuntu 9.04 since v 0.2.3, please check what change made it break this extension is irreplaceable for me.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Wow, awesome. And so much more options than minimize.to.tray (what do you expect eh?) for thunderbird.
One thing, though: I wish you could configure it to change icons when you get a *new* email--not only when you have unread messages (because people generally have thousands of them and only care when they get new ones).
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Since the most recent update, it hasn't worked right in Ubuntu 9.04. When I click the system tray icon it doesn't do anything (and when I use Gnome Do to make the window visible, it keeps showing up on different desktops). When it works it's very nice though..
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Don't work with Mandriva 2009.1 x86_64.
FF3.5.2
v 0.2.3
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Version 0.2.3 seems to be broken in Ubuntu 9.04 with TB 2.0.0.22 after an upgrade from Version 0.1.11 which worked fine. But this is a great add-on, makes things much simpler.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
it works with ubuntu 9.04+ kde 4.3 +thnbrd 2..0.22
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 1 out of 5 stars
Don't works with ubuntu 9.04 + thunderbird 2.0 in x86 and x64
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 1 out of 5 stars
don't works with xfce 4.6.1+firefox 3.5
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
goodbye alltray. It is what i always wanted it.
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Something which needs to be by default in Thunderbird. Thanks for this one
This review is for a previous version of the add-on (0.2.3).Rated 3 out of 5 stars
First, thanks to the author for this nice addon.
It works flawlessly and as expected with thunderbird (enables to keep the app loaded all the time, shows the count of unread emails)
However, I wish it could be used with firefox in order to keep all the time one instance loaded.
I don't really understand the current behaviour. For instance, when ticking the second option, whenever a new FF windows is opened, it hides instantly all the FF windows. It would make sense if it only occured with the first one.
An option that would be useful, in my opinion, would be the following one : in order to keep one FF window always open, when closing the last FF window, it would be only reduced (and reopened when clicking on the tray icon). The former windows would be actually really closed. (ATM, it's either all of them or none of them)
It could be useful for people who wish to continue using it the same way as before, by reducing at the same time the loading times (when quitting / relaunching FF). (OSX behaviour actually)
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