melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
melannen ([personal profile] melannen) wrote2006-02-24 12:23 pm

I can't do this sam

All I can say is, our home internet connection had *better* not be down all weekend. I just spent two hours going through my flists since I lost the uni wireless connection at about 3:00 yesterday, and I still have three dozen tabs open. Plus, I need to be doing research this weekend! And not just medical research for writing mpreg stories! Arrggh.

On the other hand, I have been awake, out of bed, and *not sleepy* before well 7:00 AM the past two days. It makes catching the train easy, but where did that come from? I've spent much of the time since last summer sleeping in as late as I want most days, with the deep awareness that once I finish school I may *never again* have that chance, but now that I'm at school full time again, I'm actually ... adapting to the getting up early thing. The heck? Am I turning into a grown-up now or something?

[identity profile] gaspaheangea.livejournal.com 2006-02-24 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
What irks me is that those of us who use a gazillion tabs tend to really kick the browsers below the belt. We want things like both tab and navigation memory: not only does the browser remember the tabs that were open, but it would remember the navigation history and be able to restore that when the browser restarted.
ext_193: (Default)

[identity profile] melannen.livejournal.com 2006-02-24 09:57 pm (UTC)(link)
... Opera does that.

Opera's been doing that since last century. What, you mean Firefox and Safari don't? You poor, poor things. q-:

I have tabs up that've been open for a week, through countless restarts and crashes, and I can still navigate all the way back that week. It's lovely! What's bugging me right now is that Opera used to keep all curretly open tags in cache, too, so I could read them even if I had to restart while I was offline, but it doesn't seem to do that consistently anymore.