![]() For example I use SelectiveCookieDelete in Firefox to whitelist Verizon cookies (and some others) to ensure they always remain while all others are deleted when I shut down Firefox.Īnother potential problem may be some add-on you have installed in either Firefox or Chrome. ![]() ![]() If the above fixes the problem, you might want to look into a browser add-on that allows you to easily manage the preservation and deletion of cookies. Try changing the cookie settings in the browser to not delete cookies (before doing this, you might want to clear all of your cookies and cache just to make sure there is not something left over that is causing the problem, although I don't believe that is or should be necessary). The Verizon sites depend on certain Verizon cookies being retained for the two-week login to work. My bet is that you have a cookie problem, that you have both Firefox and Chrome set to delete cookies, including the Verizon ones. I use Firefox and I do not have one single problem with logging in or staying logged in on any of the Verizon websites, they work perfectly, including the two-week login. While I do not doubt you are having the problem you describe, I believe your conclusion is totally and completely false. ![]() Because I am not using IE, EVERY SINGLE TIME that I go to Verizon to look up TV shows, for example, even though i have "keep me logged in" checked on my home PC, i have to not only log in but also verify my email address? This is just stupid wasteful nonsense Verizon's spell check doesn't recgnize "Firefox" btw It is not very reassuring that the outfit I have to rely on for internet services is so far out of tune. Verizon is still back in the IE swamp while the rest of us use Chrome or Firefox. This saves you from having to download attachment.ashx and then browsing to the file to change the extension before you can open it.This comment is still true today. Can anyone confirm this? (screenshot of installed plugins/extensions included)Īlso, a sort of work-a-round that I've spread around the office temporarily is to right click the file, choose "Save As" and change the file name and extension of the file before you save it. I think it may be one of the Microsoft related plugins, like the Microsoft Office 2003 plugin that is enabling my computer to at least detect the format and save it with the correct extension. I have many plugins/extensions installed in my firefox 8 that my co-worker does not, and think that this might be the reason that it works on my computer and not my co-workers. This effectively allows me to open the attachments without having to change the file extension (also, the above fix has not been applied on this computer). So if the file sent was file.xls, the attachment would download as. On my computer, with the same setup as the other (Win XP/Firefox8) attachments will download as where EXT is the correct extension of the file. When trying to open an attachment on one of my co-workers computers, the attachment will save as attachment.ashx and I have to rename the file extension so that the system will recognize it correctly. I tried opening the attachments in various computers in my company's network, and there is something that I can not explain. It did not make any difference to set _cache_ssl to false in the about:config. I tried the solution posted above, but with no success. I just thought I would post a follow up to my original post in hopes that it might help point someone in the right direction.
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