Isaac Schemm wrote:
Bill Spikowski wrote:

Here’s my Seamonkey question. When accessing a Google website, it’s
pretty obvious which Google Account we’re signed in on, and switching
accounts is pretty easy. But many other websites seem aware of what
Google Account was used most recently on that computer but don’t display
that information or allow users to change accounts. For instance, a
‘save to calendar’ button or a ‘save this location’ button will add an
event to Google Calendar or a location to Google Maps, but the user
can’t tell which Google Account is receiving this information, or how to
direct it to a different account. I regularly save important events to
the wrong calendar or the wrong map, not realizing what happened until
I’m out and around and need the information on my phone and can’t find
where it got stored.




I don't think Chrome and SeaMonkey would interact at all in this regard. If 
you're logged into a website in one browser, it won't affect a different 
browser.

That makes sense. I wouldn't have thought about interaction except that I use 
Lastpass, which has a setting to stay logged in to my Lastpass account on one 
browser if I'm still logged in on another browser. Doesn't really work, but it 
got me thinking about how accounts might interact under a browser's hood....


I think Firefox and IE would probably do the same thing as SeaMonkey in this 
case. Chrome has a facility for logging into a Google account from the browser 
itself, because Google makes it - other browsers don't have that, as far as I 
know. So maybe it would be easier to ask for help elsewhere, since it doesn't 
sound like a SeaMonkey-only problem.

That makes sense too. I think I'll inquire on a Firefox forum since Seamonkey 
is an offshoot.


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