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The above list shows replies to the following message: |
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Msg. 33964 of 47202
(This msg. is a reply to 33960 by monkeytrots) |
October 23, 2013 How to quickly recover lost form data in your browser
By Rick Broida, PCWorld Just the other day, this happened: After writing a fairly lengthy post in a browser-based blog tool, I hit the Backspace key to delete something--but because my cursor wasn't inside the text field at the time, Chrome interpreted that as the keyboard shortcut for "back." In other words, back to the previous page. A big chunk of my unsaved work: gone. Crud.
(I've been experimenting with the "Backspace" key in Chrome and can't duplicate the problem. What I've experienced sounds like what the article's author describes; I just can't make the Backspace key cause it. -De) This kind of thing can happen in all kinds of circumstances. Maybe you click Next or Save after completing a Web form, and your browser crashes, or the server times out, or your Internet connection croaks. Whatever the case, it means you just wasted a bunch of time and lost a bunch of work. Fortunately, there's a simple, effective "do over" in the form of Lazarus, a browser add-on that makes it easy to recover lost form data. It's available for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. (Sorry, Internet Explorer users.) http://getlazarus.com/download Lazarus automatically (and securely, with a password if you prefer) saves every keystroke you enter into any Web form, blog tool, comment box, or what have you.
To bring back your data, just look for the little Lazarus symbol above whatever box you were typing in. Click it, then choose the snippet of text you want to recover. Presto! It reappears like magic. I can't count the number of times Lazarus has rescued me from accidental deletions, wayward keystrokes, and the like. If you use any of the supported browsers, this is a must-have extension.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2056714/how-to-quickly-recover-lost-form-data-in-your-browser.html Gold is $1,581/oz today. When it hits $2,000, it will be up 26.5%. Let's see how long that takes. - De 3/11/2013 - ANSWER: 7 Years, 5 Months |
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