I haven't used AOL in 2 years. However, several of my clients do and one in particular is convinced it is best for him. He has phone company DSL at a modest speed but does everything through the AOL portal to the internet.
Here's the problem:
I upload a video to my server for him to review and add as a link to his website. He makes requested changes to the video and I do those changes and upload an update to the same file file name so as to not affect his web page coded URL. He claims that AOL builds this into a cache of their own and eventhough I have a new version of the file on my server, when he clicks on the link AOL's outdated version residing on their interim server cache is what he sees. Then he tells me he has contacted aol and their solution is to wait a few days telling him the aol cache will refresh itself as long as he doesn't keep accessing it. His suggestion to resolve the stubborn aol cache is for me to rename the file. Unfortunately, then his web page will need to be updated with the new URL or it still won't work. He doesn't build the website but hasd a web designer on the clock do it for him. He refuses to load IE to view the file direct. I tried to tell him it will work better than AOL as he will be able to see the file by hitting the refresh button.
First question I would like to know is how long does AOL's cache hang onto a dated file and second, is there an easy way on their browser to "refresh" the AOL's cache? Not the user's computer cche but AOL's.
Here's the problem:
I upload a video to my server for him to review and add as a link to his website. He makes requested changes to the video and I do those changes and upload an update to the same file file name so as to not affect his web page coded URL. He claims that AOL builds this into a cache of their own and eventhough I have a new version of the file on my server, when he clicks on the link AOL's outdated version residing on their interim server cache is what he sees. Then he tells me he has contacted aol and their solution is to wait a few days telling him the aol cache will refresh itself as long as he doesn't keep accessing it. His suggestion to resolve the stubborn aol cache is for me to rename the file. Unfortunately, then his web page will need to be updated with the new URL or it still won't work. He doesn't build the website but hasd a web designer on the clock do it for him. He refuses to load IE to view the file direct. I tried to tell him it will work better than AOL as he will be able to see the file by hitting the refresh button.
First question I would like to know is how long does AOL's cache hang onto a dated file and second, is there an easy way on their browser to "refresh" the AOL's cache? Not the user's computer cche but AOL's.