Safari - jonwbsc
OS X apps will do that sometimes, not just Safari. It doesn't mean it's a bad product. It most likely means your preferences file(s) are corrupt. Shutdwn Safari. Go to Library > Preferences and move com.apple.Safari.plist to your desktop (in case that 's not the problem, you can then put it back). Then restart Safari. The preferences will be reset to defaults when it comes back up, but that could very well do the trick.Monday, June 11 2007 @ 12:09 PM PDT
Safari - jonwbsc
OS X apps will do that sometimes, not just Safari. It doesn't mean it's a bad product. It most likely means your preferences file(s) are corrupt. Shutdwn Safari. Go to Library > Preferences and move com.apple.Safari.plist to your desktop (in case that 's not the problem, you can then put it back). Then restart Safari. The preferences will be reset to defaults when it comes back up, but that could very well do the trick.Reply to This
Monday, June 11 2007 @ 12:07 PM PDT