From: LouB on 15 May 2010 10:35 Yes it is free, BUT for very limited use.
From: Jeffrey Needle on 15 May 2010 14:52 Bear Bottoms wrote: > LouB<Lou(a)invalid.invalid> wrote in news:4BEEB11F.1040006(a)invalid.invalid: > >> Yes it is free, BUT for very limited use. >> > > Roboform paid version is good, but LastPass is better. Roboform free only > allows 10 instances...severely crippled. > > LastPass is by and far the best password manager and form filler out there. > When I try to download LastPass from their website, Seamonkey tells me that the site is wanting to install software on my computer, but it has been blocked. This doesn't happen when I'm just downloading an app. What is the site trying to put on my computer in the background?
From: za kAT on 15 May 2010 16:01 On Sat, 15 May 2010 19:44:03 +0000 (UTC), Bear Bottoms wrote: > You should tell Seamonkey to allow the download. Control the monkey. How? By spanking it? -- zakAT(a)pooh.the.cat - www.zakATsKopterChat.com
From: Gordon Darling on 15 May 2010 16:04 On Sat, 15 May 2010 19:44:03 +0000, Bear Bottoms wrote: > You should tell Seamonkey to allow the download. Control the monkey. According to the Bear "I've told them to test what infects...they apparently aren't interested in a complete test." "The program contains a sophisticated key pression intercept engine" and "The fact that it is newer and less familiar to people makes it hang higher in the tree" -- ox·y·mo·ron n. pl. ox·y·mo·ra or ox·y·mo·rons A rhetorical figure in which incongruous or contradictory terms are combined, as in Microsoft Security, Microsoft Help and Microsoft Works.
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