Time Out ...
How does the site determine when you have been "idle" for too long
and you should get BOOTED OFF... quietly, without any warning... and ... what defines being IDLE? It's very inconvenient to be timed out while you are writing
a comment in a group discussion thread, and find out it is deleted
when you click on the button to post it... It looks like you are
still logged in until you click on the submit button... then, POOF,
your comments disappear into cyberspace ...so, you have to log on
again and try to remember what you just said... if it was a long
post, you might decide to shorten it or just forget about it
altogether... which is a loss for everyone.
:-(
If posting anything longer than two lines, I click and copy so as not to lose it if suddenly timed out.There is no set time for being logged out. It seems to be a random thing wether you are active or not, and can happen anytime from a few minutes of signing in, to a few days.
Yes, it can be irritating and I've also made a habit of copying and pasting any and all posts over a paragraph. This just happened and it truly makes no sense. I'd just logged in, visited the forum, clicked on a topic and began to post a response. Luckily, I copied the post before I submitted it and once I hit the submit button, the site logged me out and took me to the log in page.
An irritating step, nonetheless, but necessary if you've posted a lengthy response. ;-)
... I just remembered... It was a good idea to make a backup copy, while composing a reply... but I forgot, just before making my comments above. . . However I thought it was a fair question to post to a general audience... if for no other reason than, as a warning to anyone else who is new on this site.
If posting anything longer than two lines, I click and copy so as not to lose it if suddenly timed out.There is no set time for being logged out. It seems to be a random thing wether you are active or not, and can happen anytime from a few minutes of signing in, to a few days.
I kind of wondered myself
Web servers have a limited number of online sessions that it can support at any one time without affecting responsiveness. Lots of factors go into it but essentially, timing out an inactive session is just part of the capacity planning a web site needs to do. Otherwise, the costs of their infrastructure goes up.