There have been a number of times when I've been viewing a long or
complex web page and found I've lost the connection without realising
it.
--
Terry Blunt <te...@langri.demon.co.uk>
Age gives you the experience to screw up properly.
I'm running V4.02 and can't find the writable box you refer to. The help
system makes absolutely no reference to this BTW :-(
I was recently surprised to find that it doesn't seem to matter what
settings you use - it is still possible to stay on-line for ever!
I accidentally left an IE5 connection open twice recently, and Connect
allowed it to stay open both times for hours until I manually
terminated. I blamed IE5, but tried an experiment with only Connect left
running - still the same! Connect counts down from 300s to often only
270s (sometimes as low as 150s) and then sends something to Demon so
that it resets the clock to 300s.
News and mail collection are both set to 10 mins. Even if they are
totally out of phase, that would only give a kick every 5 mins - so I
don't know what Connect is sending so frequently. Any ideas anyone?
Regards
Nigel
--
Dr Nigel Mackintosh Mackintosh Consultants, Wales
DISK DRIVE INDUSTRY CONSULTANTS SPECIALISTS IN E.C. FUNDING
Tel: 01244-819797 Fax: -819796 http://www.ndmack.demon.co.uk
E-mail: change 'nospam' to 'ndmack' (sorry - I really hate spammers!)
>>Run 'Connect', click on the 'Connect' button and change the value in the
>>box in the lower right corner of the panel. I find 240 s is enough for
>>using the web. It is inadvisable to disable it entirely, since you might
>>remain connected inadvertently and run up a BIG phone bill.
>
>I'm running V4.02 and can't find the writable box you refer to. The help
>system makes absolutely no reference to this BTW :-(
>
Run Connect (the main Turnpike program you use to connect), then click
the big Connect button, as though you were going to connect. Another
window opens, and you would normally click on the grey 'Connect' button
(top, right) to dial, yes?
Don't click on that. Look below it - there are four more buttons, the
first greyed out, the second Close, the third Help and the last
<<Details.
Below that is a box labelled Idle timeout [box] seconds.
Type a number in that box. I use 120 (two minutes). Then either
Connect, or Close.
--
Graeme
Hertford, England
Are you sure you don't have something else running. I fell for just
what you described above, I eventually found out it was ICQ that I had
forgot about.
Hope this helps,
--
Martin Biggs UIN: 735672
*** You are unique.... just like everybody else. ***
Thanks to you both for your help. I've got it now.
It isn't Connect, or anything in Turnpike. It's one of Billy G's clever
automatic things designed for maximum annoyance value, but I can't
remember which one. It can be killed without actually taking an axe to
the computer.
>It isn't Connect, or anything in Turnpike. It's one of Billy G's clever
>automatic things designed for maximum annoyance value, but I can't
>remember which one.
If you mean the blasted Webcheck monitor, then I recommend it is removed
ASAP. Start up in DOS mode and deleted the Webcheck loader, normally:
c:\windows\system\loadwc.exe
(IE4 will then load more quickly and you will find you have more RAM
available :)
I also deleted the Registry key that loads loadwc.exe:
\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\Current Version\Run
--
Paul Terry
Thanks for the tip. What is it exactly? Is it always OK to remove it?
>Paul Terry <pa...@musonix.demon.co.uk> writes
>>If you mean the blasted Webcheck monitor, then I recommend it is removed
>>ASAP.
>
>Thanks for the tip. What is it exactly?
http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q176/9/60.asp
> Is it always OK to remove it?
If in doubt, rename it rather than removing it. I am not entirely sure
it is what will be causing your problem, though - although it does
monitor channel subscriptions, so I suppose it is possible.
--
Paul Terry
>http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q176/9/60.asp
Found and read - thanks for the pointer.
>> Is it always OK to remove it?
>
>If in doubt, rename it rather than removing it. I am not entirely sure
>it is what will be causing your problem, though - although it does
>monitor channel subscriptions, so I suppose it is possible.
I suspect this was not actually the culprit. I was able to rename the
file from Windows (i.e. it was not in use) and it was nowhere to be
found in the Registry (though there were loads of mentions of WebCheck
itself). I don't use channels anyway.
Any more ideas? Or what could I use to capture the offending
transmission - maybe WinTop? Does anyone else find that the auto timeout
fails?
Thanks
Critical Update Notification, WebCheck*, Subscriptions...
*
Kill it with any utility that allows you access to 'hidden' tasks. Its
'MS_WebcheckMonitor' here.
--
Robert Bradley
I am not a mindreader, so I don't know everything.
It's Win95/NT only, though. Win98 loads it *inside* the Explorer
process (the shell)!
Possible Fix:
Rename %systemroot%\webcheck.dll? I haven't tried it.
File Information:
'Windows 98 web site monitor dynamic link library file.'