![]() When I disabled it, logins seem to behave much better. It might have to do with # cookies per domain we have a visitor monitoring thing based on cookies for our CRM. Immediately after login, other times it takes longer.īased on some of the ideas in this thread, I think I am starting to narrow it down. I am a web developer and noticed this problem happening so frequently I have had to switch to Firefox for debugging web apps because I get logged out of my own app so often. ![]() Glad to see someone from home base monitoring this. This innocent question may spur a lot of revelation moments :o) But try asking your fellow Safari users whether they started to experience random logouts during last few months. ![]() The bottom line: most Safari users do not see the pattern, because the logouts are too rare and unrelated event for them. It must be promoted to a pattern from a random glitch status before somebody will start googling for solution. In other words, to notice the problem one must experience it regularly. Just one of those software glitches, sign in back and keep browsing. When you were logged out for the first time, did you blame the Safari? Most people probably do not blame the web site either. Since I request more pages than an average user does, I see the logout problem more often.Ģ. As I already wrote, the more page loads Safari handles, the sooner it starts dropping transient cookies. All my daily workflow is web browser centric - I answer customer inquiries using multiple web based help desks, I manage billing using web based invoicing system, I develop web software, thus I test and debug it using web browser. There probably is something specific which all postersġ. This thread would have exploded if this has been happening for all Safari 5 users. ![]() I'm also wondering why this seems to be happening to a relatively small set of users. ![]()
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