· The answer is simple: you visited your unfinished site in Chrome before it was configured correctly. Chrome correctly just downloaded your front page script file – and it has cached that result, showing it to you again and again. A simple curl invocation will confirm this, just goes to show how useful simple command-line tools can be. To see where your browser is saving downloads, look in your browser's settings. For example, in the new Microsoft Edge, select Settings and more Settings Downloads. The file path for your downloaded files (for example, C:\Users\ [your name]\Downloads) is listed under Location. In Microsoft Edge Legacy, select Settings and more Settings. · This doesn't tell me which directory to look for downloads in, and why they don't appear in the default Android downloads folder. The solution you propose is fine for power users who aren't afraid to use a file manager, but I think an average non-technical user A) won't notice that there's an extra permission, and B) will wonder why they can't.
My internet download manager stopped working recently. I tried installing it again (newer version), but that also didn't work. I also tried to use DAP, but it wasn't accelerating the downloads. I could download faster in Chrome than it. In IDM, when I start downloading, it writes Connecting, but after that nothing. The request times out after. In my download folder I had numerous utilities, photos, PDF Files, etc. that I downloaded with my browser. When I open the download folder, all I see are the most recent files I downloaded. Is there any way I can recover these files (utilities, photos, PDF files), or are they gone forever? I just did a small one. It first created it at the very bottom of my list, and put the mouse cursor in the name box waiting for me to either type a new name, or accept the name there. Yours may be there, but off the page. It gives no indication it's doing something or has finished. My Computers. System One.
To see where your browser is saving downloads, look in your browser's settings. For example, in the new Microsoft Edge, select Settings and more Settings Downloads. The file path for your downloaded files (for example, C:\Users\ [your name]\Downloads) is listed under Location. In Microsoft Edge Legacy, select Settings and more Settings. If you browser is not Internet Explorer, FireFox or Chromium based the only option to integrate IDM into your browser is to enable "Use advanced browser integration" option in "Options→General" IDM dialog (arrow 1 on the image). Then check that integration into your browser is also enabled (arrow 2 on the image). 2. See how to find things you've downloaded on your PC. To find downloads on your PC: Select File Explorer from the taskbar, or press the Windows logo key + E.. Under Quick access, select Downloads.
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