I would probably say that the date was wrong on the PC bios, and after ntp updated it, it kicked off the chrome messgae.. Not really another explanation.. Using time on computers has been around a while, and should be foolproof by now...
On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 12:07 PM, Frank N <[email protected]> wrote: > Good points. My email program does what I tell it to. It checks for > new emails at an appropriate interval and downloads it immediately > from the server. It keeps the server happy. I have the data even if > I lose the connection. I would tell it to check every 2 hours if the > computer is inactive, if I could. > >> "Hey, I surfed the whole Internet all your bookmarks, most visited sites >> and, or your favorites ..." > > I didn't ask it to do that. And it doesn't do that for most sites. > Most pages don't refresh until I say refresh, even if they've > changed. Including this one, groups.google.com. Those which do (like > wunderground.com) are ones I don't keep active. And I can tell it > doesn't even do that for the set of 'most active sites' (the ones > which appear on a new tab). But if I shut down Chrome and bring it up > again, it revisits every single tab. > > Thus, I contend I'm being a good Internet citizen by NOT shutting down > Chrome at night. I welcome evidence to the contrary. > > To the original question, I now understand why Chrome misses me, and > many thanks to CPU for the informed answer, and the hope that even > this behavior will become smarter. > > -- > Chromium Discussion mailing list: [email protected] > View archives, change email options, or unsubscribe: > http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-discuss -- Chromium Discussion mailing list: [email protected] View archives, change email options, or unsubscribe: http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-discuss
