<br><br>On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 3:03 PM, Guillaume Marceau <<a href="mailto:gmarceau@gmail.com">gmarceau@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>> Or we can trust that the Mozilla Foundation's user interface designers has<br>
> already done the experiment. They have some of the best people of the<br>> industry working for them, including Aza Raskin, son of Jef Raskin, one of<br>> the original designer of the Macintosh. I see no reason to deviate from<br>
> their design choice.<br>> [big:] DrRacket<br>> [almost as large:] Free Download<br>> [small and grey:] 5.1.2 for Windows, English (US)<br>> [outside of the button, small and light-grey:] All Systems & Languages<br>
> Shriram, if you want I can email Aza and ask him what experiments they did<br>> to arrive at the current design.<br>><br><br>This particular design is getting more common around the web.<br><br><a href="http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/">Apple's iTune download page</a> have a big button that reads "Download Now," then at the bottom of the page they have two small links:<br>
<br> 64-bit editions of Windows Vista or Windows 7 require the iTunes 64-bit installer<br>and<br> G3 Mac Users<br><br><a href="http://www.google.com/chrome/">Google Chrome</a> has a big button that read "Download Google Chrome", right below they have "It's free and installs in seconds<br>
For Windows XP, Vista, and 7," then at the bottom of the page, in small:<br><br> Chrome for Mac or Linux · Chrome Beta<br><br><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/inkscape/">Sourceforge</a> have a big button "Download Inkscape-0.48.1…exe", and then below "Other Versions, Browse all files"<br>
<br><div>etc.</div>