> ... If you
> actually start another copy of IE, that does NOT have the same
> non-persistant cookies, and its a different session.

Is this behavior the same for both Apache::Session and CGI::Session?

-thanks

> On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> Can someone comment on some advantages/disadvantages?
>>
>> Does opening a new browser causes a new session in either of the two?
>
> well, in IE, cookes are relevant to processes, not to windows.  That is,
> you can have one process with multiple windows (file->new->window) that
> all have the same non-persistant cookies, hence, sessions.  If you
> actually start another copy of IE, that does NOT have the same
> non-persistant cookies, and its a different session.
>
> In either case, as long as the two 'windows' share the cookie on which the
> session state is based, they will be in the same session.  :)
>
> Skylos
>
> - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> - The best part about the internet is nobody knows you're a dog.
>   (Peter Stiener, The New Yorker, July 5, 1993)
> - Dogs like... TRUCKS!  (Nissan commercial, 1996)
> - PGP key: http://dogpawz.com/skylos/mykey.asc
>



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