Whats the SLT directory, and why is it there?
Within your profile folder, there is a folder with 8 random characters followed by the extension “slt”, which contains all of your profile data. This is referred to as a salted directory. When you first create your profile, the salted directory is created with a randomly generated name. SeaMonkey does this as a security measure to prevent outsiders from being able to predict the file paths of your profile information.
Within your profile folder, there is a folder with 8 random characters followed by the extension “slt”, which contains all of your profile data. This is referred to as a salted directory. When you first create your profile, the salted directory is created with a randomly generated name. Netscape does this as a security measure to prevent outsiders from being able to predict the file paths of your profile information.
Within your profile folder, there is a folder with 8 random characters followed by the extension “slt”, which contains all of your profile data. This is referred to as a salted directory. When you first create your profile, the salted directory is created with a randomly generated name. Mozilla does this as a security measure to prevent outsiders from being able to predict the file paths of your profile information.
Within your profile folder, there is a folder with 8 random characters followed by the extension “slt”, which contains all of your profile data. This is referred to as a salted directory. When you first create your profile, the salted directory is created with a randomly generated name. Mozilla does this as a security measure to prevent outsiders from being able to predict the file paths of your profile information.” — Daniel Robitaille GPG: http://robitaille.fastmail.fm/pubkey.asc (0x5C19F466) IM Jabber: robitaille at jabber.org ————– next part ————– A non-text attachment was scrubbed… Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-users/attachments/20050504/2649d48f/attachment.