Pope Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 Since the latest update, Firefox (2) crashes after every download and it's starting to piss me off. I've tried uninstalling and installing Firefox 3 but it still happens. Anyone else have this problem, and a solution? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CAIN Posted October 1, 2008 Share Posted October 1, 2008 You might try this. I got this off the Firefox Help site. Firefox can sometimes crash when you try to download files because its download history has become corrupted. To fix this, you must manually delete the downloads.rdf file from your profile: From the menu at the top of the Firefox windowbar, select FileFirefox and then select the ExitQuit FirefoxQuit menu item. Open the Firefox profiles folder. For more information, see profile folder. If the Profiles folder contains multiple folders, open the folder for the active profile. In the profile folder, find the downloads.rdf file and delete it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humodour Posted October 1, 2008 Share Posted October 1, 2008 When you uninstall, do you also delete the folder it leaves behind before reinstalling? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 From the menu at the top of the Firefox windowbar, select FileFirefox and then select the ExitQuit FirefoxQuit menu item. Uh wut? There's only the usual File at the top, and I don't see any ExitQuit FirefoxQuit in there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 When you uninstall, do you also delete the folder it leaves behind before reinstalling? Yup I did, but it keeps happening. Norton always scans every file immediately upon completion, perhaps it has something to do with that? Although it's been doing this ever since I started using this computer, and the problem occurred only recently. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humodour Posted October 1, 2008 Share Posted October 1, 2008 Try it in safe mode. Or switch to a proper operating system, like Ubuntu. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 According to this, the same problem can occur in Ubuntu, so it's not OS related. I do agree Vista is a piece of **** though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 (edited) Okay this is quickly getting reeeaaaally annoying. Imagine downloading a 200 MB file, then in a force of habit opening some kind of small file like a doc or torrent without thinking of the consequences. Firefox crashes, resulting in the loss of whatever was already downloaded from the 200 MB file. Now I have more than enough bandwith to spare, but if the download speed of that file was 20 kb and it crashes at 90%, you can imagine my frustration. I used to love Firefox but wtf is this?! Edited October 1, 2008 by Pope Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 I tried system restore and even though that gave me an error saying it could not be completed (another yay for Vista), Firefox hasn't crashed since. Let's hope I didn't jinx it by saying this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humodour Posted October 1, 2008 Share Posted October 1, 2008 Sounds like you could have fixed it by deleting a few registry entries. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pope Posted October 1, 2008 Author Share Posted October 1, 2008 Yea well I suck at those kind of things. But I uninstalled it using Total Uninstall, doesn't that remove registry entries too? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humodour Posted October 1, 2008 Share Posted October 1, 2008 (edited) I dunno what that is, but by the sound of it, yeah, it probably should. Which really confuses me. It could have been a virus or spy-ware then. Did you run Hijack This? Edit: hmm, but that still doesn't explain why it would happen on Ubuntu as well. Unless it's a problem with multiple potential causes. Edited October 1, 2008 by Krezack Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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