On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 12:53 PM, Aric Guite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  I agree with mostly everything you've said, except with the the part
>  that implies that if another application (be it Safari or otherwise)
>  deletes my Camino passwords, I'm going to have to just live with it.

In addition to Florian's point, which is a good one, I don't see where
I implied that. I explained how to file a bug against the software
that is actually doing the deletion that people are unhappy about,
which isn't at all the same thing as telling you to "just live with
it".

If you downloaded Foo, a bookmark management program that had a reset
button that, whenever you pressed it, unexpectedly deleted all of
Camino's bookmarks (because it used them as a source), would you
expect us to change the file Camino stores bookmarks in so that Foo
wouldn't find it any more, or would you complain to the developer of
Foo, and stop using that button in Foo in the meantime?

I'm confused at what seems to be a perception that it is unreasonable
to say that the right place for Safari behavior to be changed is in
Safari, rather than Camino. If I checked in code that made Reset
Camino have the same behavior that Safari has/had, would you email
Apple and tell them that Safari must stop using the standard keychain
system in order to prevent data loss?

On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 1:07 PM, Noemi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  It's counterintuitive to be unable to reset one browser for fear of
>  losing data you want to use in the other.

Then I suggest that you contact the developers of any browser with a
reset function that has that behavior; Camino is not one of them.

-Stuart
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