On Fri, 2007-05-04 at 00:22 +0200, Reinout van Schouwen wrote: > Op donderdag 03-05-2007 om 08:56 uur [tijdzone -0700], schreef Dylan > McCall: > > > Session restoring already happens, but only when it crashes or ends in > > an unpleasant manner. This results in one of the most ridiculous lines > > in a user-friendly FAQ I've ever read: (...) > > The thing that you might be missing here, is that in the underlying > vision behind Epiphany, there is no such thing as an Epiphany session. > There is just a GNOME session that might or might not show open web > pages. The question if there is an epiphany executable in memory or not > is irrelevant. GNOME users can indicate their preference to restore the > GNOME session at login, and web pages that were open last time will be > restored then.
What I find a little odd is that I sometimes get the offer to recover my previous session when I launch Epiphany, even though it never crashed. In fact, I've rarely seen Epiphany crash. So I guess it must be something with Gnome that thinks Epiphany was still open or still running the last time I logged out of Gnome, or something. It's not really a bother because it doesn't happen that often, and it's easy enough to click "Don't recover." It's just somewhat amusing that an app that is, overall, very well behaved seems to think it is not behaving as well as it is. :-) As for the roadmap ... what about any plans for the sidebar? Will we ever, for instance, be able to load bookmarks there, or something else? _______________________________________________ epiphany-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/epiphany-list
