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I wonder if there is anything different about the way Camino handles system resources? I'm very bad about running too many programs on my computer at once. I put in extra memory and try to remember to close the memory hogs if I'm not going to use them again right away.

When I tried Camino, I was probably also running Mail, Firefox, iChat, possibly IE, possibly iCal.. and probably Photoshop. Maybe another memory hog like InDesign or Illustrator. If I'm working on a project, I save it, but tend to leave programs open so I can go right back to the project. I'm reminded that I need to close stuff down more often if the computer starts running slow.

Everything else seemed OK when Camino was being pokey.

I may take the plunge and update to 10.4.5 soon. Just trying to figure out what the benefits are. Things are humming along nicely with 10.4.3.
I can't imagine that Memory would be an issue, since, as I'm sure your familier, OS X's core processing allocates the needed memory to active applications (an open application isn't nec. active). I too, leave many applications open at a time, including Photoshop CS2 (don't like to wait for it to open). Not to add insult to injury, but I've been listing primarily with my G3 800 iBook, so I even further doubt memory (maxed out at 640mb RAM). I'm continuing to work for a solution for you, but I'm kind of stumped at the moment...
I can't upload with Java on any browser. I have tried Firefox, safari, and just now I tried Camino.
It gets to the point of saying it's 100% uploaded and waiting for a response and then it just sits forever and never uploads, Occasionally it will go to a page that says URL is too long.
I have a Mac OS X 10.5.2
I can only use the basic uploader witch takes me forever to do. Frown

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