| Writing Forum | Poetry | Role Play | Famous Poetry | Poetry.com Scam | Sheet Music | Educational Resources | Awesomeness ||

 User  Clayton 
 Topic  Frustrating 
 Message  When I am surfing the site( seeing other parts of the place, reading different sections of comments, or even just typing in a new submission) when I return to my previous point I’m logged off.
Sometimes after much effort to type in a work, it is lost into cyber where-ever.
Why must this be?????????????????????????????????
 

|| Replies ||

 User   Webmaster | 2004-05-23 |
 Subject  untitled 
 Message  If you get a program called winkey and get a text editor you can configure it so that you pop up the editor on a windows key combination. Ex. my program editor is set to windows key(by alt near spacebar)+Z. So all you’d have to do is

CTRL+A+C (select all, copy)
winkey+z (program editor)
ctrl + V( paste)
ctrl +S (save)

That’s if you don’t like your mouse.


Additionally if it doesn’t send you to the registeration area, you can go to ES and login, click back, click refresh, and click to resend data. 

 User   Interpolation | 2004-05-20 |
 Subject  untitled 
 Message  whoops! mind the misplaced sentence in my previous entry. I was doing three things at once. ;) 

 User   Interpolation | 2004-05-20 |
 Subject  Tips 
 Message  Ive had this problem before from a different computer. I found using a word processor as an intermediary worked well in not losing original poetry and prose to the server timing out. If you look though it does give you fair warning in advance that it might happen if you take to long in the submission area. Or occasionally copy your progressive piece to the clipboard: highlight the text and then hit (ctrl+c) ; then repaste the text with (shift+ins).  

 User   Webmaster | 2004-04-19 |
 Subject  untitled 
 Message  I cannot control the life of the session variables, my server is a bum like that and won’t let me edit the php.ini. You can make your password as short as you want. I can’t do much about that problem. =/ 

Copyright (c) Jimmy Ruska 2003