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I don't understand, it use to be that I could open any thread and read it but could only post if I were registered. So if the spammers aren't registered how could they post - and you must have been doing a good job cause I've never seen a spam message yet. But okay, it's not my board and I don't have the headaches, it was just nicer being able to take a quick look now and then without the hassle of logging on every time.jar546 said:Yup, need to be signed in to view Inside the threads. Up to that point, you can view the forum and topics but not the thread content. This was already explained in another thread.Anyone else willing to spend 2-3 hours a night weeding through spammers let me know and we will shut off that requirement & some others that some may not like. I don't need to be hacked into.
Still at the office here at 10:35pm
Me too. I don't even know my password anymore.Yankee said:I didn't notice because I am signed in "forever"
Paul, there is no way to stay logged in if you delete your cookies every time you shut down your browser. See if you can set it up to no delete your cookies for this site.Paul Sweet said:Having to login each time just to view posts is a pain. Is there any way to remember a login without cookies? I use Firefox on my home & travel computers, and have them set up to delete new cookies when I shut Firefox down. I guess I could start Firefox, reset the preferences to accept cookies, then login to this site, then shut down Firefox before other sites can set cookies, restart it, and reset the preferences back to deleting new cookies when I shut Firefox down if that's the only way, but I have 4 separate instances of Firefox (2 computers with Windows & Linux on each).
If someone was pretty knowledgable on configuring software when installing Firefox you could probably accomplish it. You know when you install a program and the program asks if you want typical or custom....there is a good chance that you could.Since I don't have Firefox I don't know if the software allows you to chose where it is installed. As long as it doesn't get into the OS of the computer it would probably work.Mech said:Mule - would a paritioned harddrive work any different than installing the second Firefox program in a new directory or are you are talking about installing the OS on the new partition too? An old harddrive or a flashdrive would probably be easier to use than partitioning an HD that is already in use.Enginerd - I liked Fatboy's response also!
Not if you don't get caught.fatboy said:Do you need a permit to build a partition for a hard drive?![]()