Interviewed by CNN on 14/12/2011 20:44, km told the world: > ... whenever your away from ur puter SM should somehow be locked > so no one else can use it. if someone tries to access it the first > thing they try is the browse if they can't, well the exercise is left > for YOU!!! > > KM
To expand on Philip Taylor's answer: In a nutshell, it's not the job of each application to lock itself from use by strangers. There's several reasons for that, but generally speaking, they would have to hook into the system to be able to do that, which is generally frowned upon -- and if you have more than one application doing that, you end up with a mess to manage. The correct way to deal with this situation, as Philip pointed out, is to use the operating system lock desktop feature. This will lock not only Seamonkey, but all other programs. On Windows, you can set it up in two steps: 1) Create a password for your user account; 2) Configure your screen saver to display the logon screen on resuming. Doing that, every time your screen saver kicks in, your desktop will be locked. You can also lock it at any time by keying Windows+L. -- MCBastos This message has been protected with the 2ROT13 algorithm. Unauthorized use will be prosecuted under the DMCA. -=-=- ... Sent from my Teletype ASR-33. * Added by TagZilla 0.066.2 running on Seamonkey 2.5 * Get it at http://xsidebar.mozdev.org/modifiedmailnews.html#tagzilla _______________________________________________ support-seamonkey mailing list [email protected] https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey

