Pidgin could simpy detect user activity (which it already does) and then login. 
Simple.


David Balažic
Software Engineer
www.comtrade.com



________________________________
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
William Morris
Sent: Saturday, March 02, 2013 5:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [dkim] Re: re-enabling? Feature request

Yeah, you're missing something. Apparently you've never learned how to think 
things through.

That's a whole lot of sarcastic (and dare I say, unnecessary and unhelpful) 
copying and pasting; you made your point after the first one. Do you suppose I 
would request the feature if that's actually how it worked?

The auto-login happens only on start-up. If I leave a computer running at both 
work and home and want to switch between them, then, yes, I have to go through 
the step of actively taking control at that location. Since the home computer 
is off while at the office, but the office is on 24/7, your scenario as written 
is not applicable.

Go back to vo-tech, junior, and learn how to function in the real world.



On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Dave Warren 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 2/27/2013 07:44, William Morris wrote:
I use Pidgin both at home and at the office. When I log on after being on at 
either place, I have to re-enable the account. Stupid, really, just a single 
click, but bothersome all the same. I would really love it if Pidgin would just 
connect and move on - Yahoo! Messenger does this, and it's really the only 
feature I miss.

Assuming that Yahoo doesn't allow multiple clients to connect at once, what 
would you expect to happen when you leave pidgin connected at the office and 
then login at home?

I'd guess that what would happen would be this: Your pidgin at home would 
connect, and it would disconnect you at your office. Next, your pidgin at the 
office would connect, and it would disconnect you at home. Your pidgin at home 
would connect, and it would disconnect you at your office. Next, your pidgin at 
the office would connect, and it would disconnect you at home. Your pidgin at 
home would connect, and it would disconnect you at your office. Next, your 
pidgin at the office would connect, and it would disconnect you at home. Your 
pidgin at home would connect, and it would disconnect you at your office. Next, 
your pidgin at the office would connect, and it would disconnect you at home. 
Your pidgin at home would connect, and it would disconnect you at your office. 
Next, your pidgin at the office would connect, and it would disconnect you at 
home. Your pidgin at home would connect, and it would disconnect you at your 
office. Next, your pidgin at the office would connect, and it would disconnect 
you at home.

Then Yahoo would disable your entire account for abuse, and you'd be back here, 
wondering why that happened.

Am I missing something about how your change would work?

Speaking as a user, I'd rather you learn to log off so that if I try to IM you 
a few minutes before you get into the office, I know that you're not online, 
rather than wondering why you aren't responding to my IM for hours. But that's 
just me.

--
Dave Warren
http://www.hireahit.com/
http://ca.linkedin.com/in/davejwarren

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