>Where do you mean Chis ?  In classic control panels or OSX Preferences ?
>This does not compute.

In OS X's System Prefs, go to the Classic System Pref, there is an option 
in that pref pane to allow Classic to sleep when idle. What this does is 
basically unloads most or all of the Classic subsystem from OS X, freeing 
up RAM and processor time for other applications. The downside is, often 
Classic apps (in particular ones that used network access, like Emailer), 
would hang or fail to work properly when you tried to use them again 
after Classic had been put to sleep.

It seems there is a problem with waking Classic up and having all 
functions start working correctly again. You can avoid many of the 
problems by simply telling OS X to not sleep Classic when it is idle.

The downside to this is, that means the Classic system will always be 
loaded and taking up RAM and some processor time. RAM is the bigger 
consideration, but honestly, if you are running OS X, you want to jam as 
much RAM in the machine as it can hold or you can afford. OS X loves to 
have lots and lots of RAM.

-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>

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