Greg,
This may sound like clutching at straws but... is there anything in the way of a proxy server being used by the workstation clients? Any popup blockers apart from the built in ones in the browsers?
I run a little thing called Proxomitron on my PC. This morning it was stopping Flash from working properly when I was accessing the demo server. The Flash movie would start to load but it wouldn't get any data from the server. Turned it off and it worked fine. Could have been Prox, or it could have been complete co-incidence.
Yet I could access other LAMS servers without a problem. GRRRR!
The other thing to try is go to the C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\Macromedia\ directory on the workstation, and then search in the subdirectories for a directory with the name of your LAMS server. Delete the directory level with the server name.
e.g. on my PC I have:
C:\Documents and Settings\Fiona\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\#SharedObjects\FHKSY5XY\translations.lamscommunity.org\
C:\Documents and Settings\Fiona\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys\#translations.lamscommunity.org\
This is where Flash stores cached files. Sometimes Flash gets itself terminally confused about the files and you have to clean it up manually. In this case, I'd delete the directories translations.lamscommunity.org\ and #translations.lamscommunity.org\ to remove any files cached for the translations.lamscommunity.org's LAMS server.
Then reboot the workstation.
Nasty, but we can't work out why Flash needs this occasionally. Normally we only get it on developer's PCs - and given the mix of software we run its probably not completely Flashs fault (e.g. I run one version of Flash in IE and another version in Firefox).
Is this a public server I could access, or is it behind a firewall?
Fiona
Posted by Fiona Malikoff