> > If there is no internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe > with a magnifying glass, but no favicon.
It'd be nice that QS pull the icons from cache if there's a problem with the internet connection. On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per >> Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to >> load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice >> any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no >> internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a >> magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> > On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 6:57:08 PM UTC+2, Patrick wrote: > > > Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update > frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? > > The icon for each 'web search' object will be attempted to load once per > Quicksilver session. If you restart Quicksilver, then it will attempt to > load the icon again. The 'background' behaviour means you will not notice > any hang in Quicksilver when it tries to fetch the icon. If there is no > internet connection, Quicksilver will default to the globe with a > magnifying glass, but no favicon. > > On 11 April 2012 14:00, su <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No. I probably read about it in the user's guide, but since I usually >> have direct links bookmarked, hence catalogued, I just don't need it. >> However, thanks for the tip. >> >> Rob, Patrick, how will the background fetching behave (update >> frequency, no favicons, no internet connection)? >> >> On Wednesday, April 11, 2012 2:20:13 PM UTC+2, Rob McBroom wrote: >>> >>> On Apr 11, 2012, at 4:49 AM, su wrote: >>> >>> > I must add that I'd also like this feature to be performed manually >>> because of Little Snitch. >>> > I find it annoying to create superfluous permanent rules for tasks >>> that could/should occur once in a while. >>> >>> I guess you don’t use Quicksilver to quickly filter the links on a web >>> page then? Have you ever tried it? Bring up a URL and hit → or /. :-) >>> >>> -- >>> Rob McBroom >>> <http://www.skurfer.com/> >>> >>> >
