[Crosspost to IE General]
> ...The only difference I see is that the faulty
> PC is running AVG and the machine that works is running Symantec.
Has a Norton or McAfee application ever been installed on this machine
(e.g., a free-trial version that came preinstalled when you bought it)?
Make certain that time, date, and time *zone* settings are all correct.
Web Site Reports That You Must Enable Cookies
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/299331
Managing Cookies
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/283185
http://mvps.org/winhelp2002/cookies.htm
http://inetexplorer.mvps.org/archive...rs.htm#cookies
--
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Tom wrote:
> I posted the following on another news group but did not get any response.
> I
> am hoping someone knows a littel bit about cookies and Vista.
>
> I have a laptop running Vista Business SP1 and IE 7.0. My customer
> supplied
> me with a HTTPS test site where the certificate is not really valid so
> that
> I can test my BHO. I try to login into his site and I immediately get an
> error message on their web page saying cookies are not enabled.
>
> I set the browser wide open to accept any cookie from anybody. It appears
> that other sites are writing cookies without any problems.
>
> I have tested this on another Vista Ultimate machine and I was able to log
> into the site without any issues. In addition I tested this on other XP
> machines with IE 7 & IE 8 without any issues.
>
> The funny thing is that each browser (faulty and non faulty) have the
> exact
> same internet option settings. The only difference I see is that the
> faulty
> PC is running AVG and the machine that works is running Symantec.
>
> Does anybody have any idea of what is going on? Or is there a setpoint
> somewhere that I am not familiar with.
>
> Thanks,
> Tom -