Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
Ed Mullen wrote:
Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
In the latest version of Cookie Manager (SM 2.21), if I select a domain
that has set cookies in the left-hand pane, and then select and delete
one of the cookies in the right-hand pane, focus is transferred to the
left pane (to the domain name).

In previous versions, I would sometimes delete several cookies by
selecting one and hitting Del several times. If I do that now, I
inadvertently delete the domain, clearing its permissions. This was
really annoying when I found I couldn't get into my bank's website
because it defaulted to block all cookies.

Solution that still works: Select several cookies first, then hit Del or
Remove (being careful to ensure that the checkbox is set as you wish).


You might find the old cookie manager interface easier to use in this
application:

chrome://communicator/content/permissions/cookieViewer.xul

Yep, it is.

But not everyone knows about that or uses it. My guess is most users do
as the developers intended: Tools | Cookie Manager | Manage Stored Cookies.


Yes, but, that's why SeaMonkey is different. We users tend to be those who poke around in the innards of the application and squeeze more out of it, as this newsgroup attests to.

I've got plenty of apps that I use regularly that are functionally great but rather boring to use. They just work, aren't terribly innovative, don't chage much version to version.

Not SeaMonkey. It's rather delightful to always be a bit on the bleeding edge. Hey! You know how you can indentify pioneers, right? They're the ones with arrows in their backs. ;-)

--
Ed Mullen
http://edmullen.net/
"A bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. On my desk, I have a work station."
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