The last one to do it are Firefox people (dropping \”compact\” layout), but let\’s make it clear: using pixels of our screens (especially vertically) is becoming increasly difficult as touch screen get prevalent. I\’ve been trying to avoid Adobe Acrobat Reader DC for as long as I could for that very reason too.
Please, once for all, make the padding-around-icons/text/UI elements a system-wide tunable feature. Stop having padding pre-built in your icons. It is not something you as a system designer should decide, just like you shouldn\’t decide whether I\’ll wear a tie or a bow.
Look at that non-sense: there is so much ribbons and margins when I have a document to review that none of my screens would allow me to properly see an A4 page large enough so I could read the text effortless… unless I turn full-screen of course, in which case I no longer have access to people\’s comments.
(I truly wish there was an open-source alternative to adobe review system, but given that they now try to automatically upload reviewed documents on their cloud, I doubt that is about to come)
Hopefully, with Firefox, you can toggle browser.compactmode.show
and have \’compact\’ option showing up again when you try to customize your menu bars.