Roger Fink wrote:
flyguy wrote:
On 3/31/2012 12:13 PM, Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
BIll Spikowski wrote:
Jay Garcia wrote:
I've experienced similar email blockages while traveling other
places. I doubt it's a Seamonkey problem, but I'm wondering what
a workaround might be?
Remove cache and cookies to see if that works.
Remove cache, or just delete files in the cache?
Delete ALL cookies? That seems pretty dramatic -- are there some
specific cookies that might interfere with email?
What are you worried about? I've had SeaMonkey set to delete all
cookies on close for years, and never missed them. It's not like
your favorite busybody websites don't know how to set new cookies to
monitor your every move...
I have several websites for which I allow cookies; generally, these
are weather websites from which I require specific forecasts at
specific times. I would never "delete all cookies" unless there was
no other way to resolve the problem, because I'd have to set them up
all over again. The default, however, is "session cookies".
This lets you easily preserve the cookies you want and get rid of the rest:
http://www.ampsoft.net/utilities/CookieMonster.php
Another trick I use is to delete all cookies I don't want using the
built in SM Cookie Manager, and then enable "allow session cookies only".
This way only the ones I retained prior to enabling "session only" are
retained from that point forward. Any *new* ones are deleted at close
of session automatically.
--
- Rufus
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