The problem is that Adobe starts it themselves...
Eirik Oeverby wrote:
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