Interesting point.

Could you elaborate a bit (about the philosophy behind this)? I
noticed that the Chrome development team has chosen not to alert the
user when the browser (and consequently all tabs) are closed. I found
that a bit strange. I figured that they wanted to keep that additional
code out of the picture, and enabled via an extension, if so required.
Is that the reason?

WT

On Sep 7, 9:33 am, Bob Oliver Bigellow XLII <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I vote for the separate process to keep the downloads going.  Having
> it "prompt" the user goes against Chrome's design philosophy.
>
> On Sep 6, 9:24 pm, TheTooth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > yes I've had this issue to. because chrome uses the same core instance
> > for downloads when you exit the browser you kill off the entire
> > application instance so the only way to fix this is too add something
> > like a system tray icon that keeps the downloads running but still not
> > running any copys of the browser it self.
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