call a .cmd instead of the acrobat .exe, a .cmd that issues a 'start'.. 
that way acrobat is an entirely separate session, and mozilla will not 
have a problem with it.

-Eirik

David Rocks wrote:
>    This has been a long time problem but not consistent. Most of the 
> time Adobe stays in the system after leaving the window where it 
> displayed the document that called it in the first place. But not 
> always. I've never seen a pattern. Is there any way to define how Adobe 
> is called by the browser so that it will terminate when it is no longer 
> the active window? Or to force it to always display in a 'new' window 
> that could be terminated?
> 
> Michael Kaply wrote:
> 
>> eric w wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 16 Oct 2002 21:46:22 UTC, Brendan McCullough 
>>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> Every once in awhile I get the message "You cannot connect to 
>>>> www.ebank.hsbc.ca because SSL is disabled."  It also happens with 
>>>> other bank sites.  There is no cure, if I surf a few other places 
>>>> and then go back it will work again.  In the Preferences there is a 
>>>> tick in every box.  Any suggestions?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> i intermittently see the following error screen when trying to logon 
>>> to  my
>>> bank.  a reboot always fixes it. (1.2a)
>>>
>>> 500: server error [20-0002]            
>>>
>>
>> We actually found this one, but there is no way to fix it. It happens 
>> if you start Adobe Acrobat. Adobe stays started after Mozilla closes 
>> and keeps files locked.
>>
>> Closing Acrobat should actually fix the problem.
>>
>> Mike
>>
> 
> 


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