Paul B. Gallagher wrote:


Why three profiles?  One is specifically for banking and managing my
investments; the related Web sites require that my preferences be set
different from how I normally want them (e.g., the banks want me to
accept all cookies, to accept popups, and to disable the Secret Agent
extension).  One is specifically for reading amateur fiction online; it
has almost as many bookmarks as my general-purpose profile.  And then
one is my general-purpose profile.  There is a fourth profile just for
guests.

I keep a "bare metal" profile that generally has no user preferences settings or extensions installed. That way, if a site doesn't render properly, as a result of all my tweaks with AdBlock Plus, NoScript, cookie permissions, etc., I may temporarily switch to the bare metal profile, to get what I want.


You don't have to have separate profiles for that. You can specify in
the Data Manager that your bank's website is authorized to set cookies
and launch popups, while keeping your default prohibitions for sites
that are not explicitly listed. Just don't save those passwords on your
computer! ;-)

And depending on your routine and your tastes, you can file bookmarks in
different folders if you like. Or not...

Another thing that you can do....

If you go into about:config, and set browser.bookmarks.autoExportHTML to true, that causes your bookmarks to be exported bookmarks.html, each time you close down Seamonkey.

In all my other browser installations and profiles, I set this to be the home page, and as a result, no matter what browser or profile I'm working in, I always have access to all my bookmarks, current as of whenever I last last closed down my primary Seamonkey profile.

Smith
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