![]() Independently of this (or maybe related?) every now and again, my Chrome window will flicker, then flash white, I’ll see a bit of the desktop background through it, and then the entire window stays white. If I open a couple of tabs and leave them open while I’m working on other tabs, I get a “Using Significant Energy” warning in the battery bar, then the fan comes on and ramps up faster and faster and faster while the battery meter tanks. Side note: I’ve had to switch away from Chrome for development on Mojave because, for reasons I’ve yet to ascertain, Chrome absolutely rapes my battery. Tried random icons dotted around the browser frame and didn’t find anything. Is it just me? Or is this how Safari works? And is there any way to make Safari share login cookies across tabs in a single private window? I squizzed through all the settings and found nothing of note, checked the context menus and didn’t find anything. All tabs in a single private session window are shared so the power of tabs is retained. This is in contrast to Chrome (and I believe Firefox) where tabs in the same window share login info, but tabs in other private browsing windows don’t share data with other windows. Seems that each tab in Safari is its own silo and login cookies are not shared. I quite often have the main gmail window open in one tab and then right-click/open in new tab particular messages so I can refer back to them more easily while I’m composing a new one in the main tab. This means I don’t have to repeatedly sign out/switch from my main account. To save myself hassle when I have multiple email accounts, for example, I’ll log into a private browsing session to access a separate gmail account which I use for testing new author account notification requests etc. I get the same in Dropbox and Trello and gmail etc. If, however, I right-click and open an admin link in a new private tab (so I can do a side-by-side comparison of content or copy/paste bits and pieces easily from one tab/theme to another), I’m kicked back to the login screen. If I open a Txp site in a private browsing session for testing changes, and log in to the admin side, great.
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