You are here

Cookies and Saved Passwords?

7 posts / 0 new
Last post
CallMeZoot
Offline
Last seen: 18 years 4 months ago
Joined: 2006-06-10 15:27
Cookies and Saved Passwords?

Hi,

Does Portable Firefox save cookies and "remember this password" information on the thumbdrive, or on the host computer? Is there a way to make it always save this information on the thumbdrive?

Also, what about saved passwords that are saved by the website, not firefox (i.e. where there's a checkbox that says "remember me on this computer.") Can I make this information save on the thumbdrive instead of on the host computer?

Thanks,
chris.

John T. Haller
John T. Haller's picture
Offline
Last seen: 2 hours 21 min ago
AdminDeveloperModeratorTranslator
Joined: 2005-11-28 22:21
Flash drive, of course

Otherwise, it wouldn't be portable, would it? Everything is kept on the drive.

Sometimes, the impossible can become possible, if you're awesome!

CallMeZoot
Offline
Last seen: 18 years 4 months ago
Joined: 2006-06-10 15:27
Gr

Great, so by default, 0% of data ends up on the host computer?

How about cache'd pictures, streaming audio and video, etc.?

I'm new to portable applications, so I apologize if my questions are newbie-ish.

Thanks,
chris.

Bruce Pascoe
Offline
Last seen: 12 years 10 months ago
Joined: 2006-01-15 16:14
...

You might not realize it, but you just asked the same question twice. Cookies are stored on the drive with PFF; "remember me on this computer" on websites just stores said information in a cookie.

-
fatcerberus@yahoo.com  [aim: fatcerberus]
I have no witty remarks or quotes to share at the moment.

CallMeZoot
Offline
Last seen: 18 years 4 months ago
Joined: 2006-06-10 15:27
One more question, which may

One more question, which may be redundant:

How about downloaded plugins? (Shockwave, JAVA, etc.) Don't these require some kind of registry entries? Is it possible for these to be installed without putting anything on the host computer?

(I work in a school system which requires administrative privileges to install anything on the computers, even plugins, so I would like to have these available on my thumbdrive for when I need them).

Thanks again,
chris.

Bruce Pascoe
Offline
Last seen: 12 years 10 months ago
Joined: 2006-01-15 16:14
...

Nope, you can actually just drop most plugin .dlls (including the Flash plugin) into the plugins directory and they'll work fine. The only exceptions are plugins like QuickTime and ShockWave which actually just forward instructions to the locally installed plugins.

-
fatcerberus@yahoo.com  [aim: fatcerberus]
I have no witty remarks or quotes to share at the moment.

Ryan McCue
Ryan McCue's picture
Offline
Last seen: 15 years 1 month ago
Joined: 2006-01-06 21:27
Also

and Java.
----
R McCue
PortaBlog Home and My Website

"If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate."

Topic locked