The RC and versions before it automatically grabbed data from whatever you had set as your/default browser/... a number of complaints had come in from people who either did not have this set correctly, or who simply did not want anything migrated, so the Migration UI now prompts before doing so (also offering 0.8 migration) - this will be in the 0.9 final.
That's correct. If you work around the site's OS check and install the theme on windows you'll get the Aquafied icons but not the actual pin stripes, UI controls (buttons, scrollbars etc)... they'll look like Windows controls to an extent since the Windows implementation of the theme renderer is doing the drawing.
FWIW - many apps on MacOS use highly customized widget sets that are not part of the collection of "stock" widgets provided by the OS, including Adobe Photoshop, Macromedia Dreamweaver, Internet Explorer and even Safari. These "owner draw" widgets are effectively the same concept as Firebird with its native theme renderer + XUL. The deal with Firebird is that because it's in its pre-1.0 state on MacOS X not all of the rendering glitches have been corrected.
Really? Seems unlikely given the name "LadyLucky" ;-)
The RC and versions before it automatically grabbed data from whatever you had set as your /default browser/... a number of complaints had come in from people who either did not have this set correctly, or who simply did not want anything migrated, so the Migration UI now prompts before doing so (also offering 0.8 migration) - this will be in the 0.9 final.
That's correct. If you work around the site's OS check and install the theme on windows you'll get the Aquafied icons but not the actual pin stripes, UI controls (buttons, scrollbars etc)... they'll look like Windows controls to an extent since the Windows implementation of the theme renderer is doing the drawing.
FWIW - many apps on MacOS use highly customized widget sets that are not part of the collection of "stock" widgets provided by the OS, including Adobe Photoshop, Macromedia Dreamweaver, Internet Explorer and even Safari. These "owner draw" widgets are effectively the same concept as Firebird with its native theme renderer + XUL. The deal with Firebird is that because it's in its pre-1.0 state on MacOS X not all of the rendering glitches have been corrected.
Or Nissan Safari, depending on where you come from. ( http://www.nissan.co.jp/SAFARI/ )