"empty the cache?"
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Washington, DC
Programs: Star Alliance Gold/UA Mileage Plus Premier 1K
Posts: 257
"empty the cache?"
not sure if right forum for this.
we have a mac air. United.com is getting worse and worse - keeps crapping out, doing weird stuff. in the past when this happened I think i got instructions to "empty the cache." Of course don't still have that information. any chance this sounds familiar to anyone and you have an idea of what to do? if yes please share, thank you!
we have a mac air. United.com is getting worse and worse - keeps crapping out, doing weird stuff. in the past when this happened I think i got instructions to "empty the cache." Of course don't still have that information. any chance this sounds familiar to anyone and you have an idea of what to do? if yes please share, thank you!
#2
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: n.y.c.
Posts: 14,059
https://www.google.com/search?q=clear+cache+safari
The first link appears to have instructions. (I don't have a Mac.)
The first link appears to have instructions. (I don't have a Mac.)
#4
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 38,543
not sure if right forum for this.
we have a mac air. United.com is getting worse and worse - keeps crapping out, doing weird stuff. in the past when this happened I think i got instructions to "empty the cache." Of course don't still have that information. any chance this sounds familiar to anyone and you have an idea of what to do? if yes please share, thank you!
we have a mac air. United.com is getting worse and worse - keeps crapping out, doing weird stuff. in the past when this happened I think i got instructions to "empty the cache." Of course don't still have that information. any chance this sounds familiar to anyone and you have an idea of what to do? if yes please share, thank you!
Your browser keeps the files that make up websites around after you have viewed the website. The performance benefit from not constantly reloading the common elements is considerable.
Unfortunately, it's possible for something to get messed up in this cache, or it's possible for a file that was marked as not changing to change, causing the browser to use the now-incorrect saved copy. (Note that a shift-F5 on the page generally overcomes old pages in cache issues without dumping the whole cache.)
I have never run into a situation where clearing the cache fixed a problem that shift-F5 didn't. However, multiple times I have run into the related issue of old cookies that cause a modified website to barf. Removing the offending cookies let the website work properly again. (This has always involved persistent login information.)
I have also run into a situation where the presence of something in the temporary files on the computer would cause a program problems. The culprit was never identified and I know there was nothing the program was reading from the temporary files at that point--it was my own code. Of course it would never fail on anything other than a factory floor computer and saving a snapshot of the temp directory yielded no useful information. As they were factory floor machines it wasn't practical to simply set the offending machine aside for me to puzzle out what was going on.





