We are in the middle of upgrading the Sam Weiss website to a faster and more secure server, and during this brief migration you may temporarily see an unexpected page, older content, login issues, or a “Please log in” message. This is normal and will resolve automatically as your internet provider updates its routing (DNS propagation), which usually takes 5–30 minutes. In some instances, it could take a few days. If the site doesn’t look right or you can’t access the Daily Briefing yet, please refresh the page, try a private/incognito window, or clear your browser cache.
You can also try switching from Wi-Fi to cellular or vice-versa, which often forces an immediate update. No action is required on your part—your login, subscription, and access remain exactly the same. This upgrade is a one-time improvement to make the site significantly faster and more reliable, especially during peak market hours. Everything will return to normal shortly—thank you for your patience.
General
When a website moves to a new server, some people continue seeing the old version for a short time because their browser or internet provider is still storing the “old location” of the site. This is called DNS propagation, and it can take anywhere from 5–30 minutes, although a small number of providers may take a few hours to a few days. If the site looks incorrect, is missing posts, or asks you to log in again, clearing your browser cache will force your device to load the new server immediately. Below are simple instructions for each device and browser.
Safari on Mac (Desktop & Laptop)
On Safari for Mac, the easiest way to refresh the site is to clear the cached files your computer is holding. Click Safari in the upper-left corner of your screen → Settings → Privacy → Manage Website Data… → search for sam-weiss.com → select Remove → then click Done. If you want to clear all cached data, choose Remove All. You can also press Command + Option + E to empty the Safari cache instantly. After doing this, close Safari completely and reopen it before revisiting the site.
Safari on iPhone / iPad
On Apple mobile devices, go to Settings → Safari → Clear History and Website Data, then confirm. This clears cached pages, old routing, and stored versions of the website. After clearing, fully close Safari from the app switcher, reopen it, and reload the page. If it still shows the old site, switch off Wi-Fi temporarily and load the site using cellular data, which often fetches the newest version immediately.
Google Chrome on Windows / Mac
In Chrome on desktop, click the three dots in the top-right → Settings → Privacy and Security → Clear Browsing Data. Select Cached Images and Files, then click Clear Data. Closing and reopening the browser afterward often helps. You may also try an incognito window (Command+Shift+N on Mac or Ctrl+Shift+N on Windows), which loads the newest version by default without using old cache.
Google Chrome on iPhone / iPad
Open Chrome, tap the three dots at the bottom or top → History → Clear Browsing Data → make sure Cached Images and Files is selected → Clear Browsing Data. Close the app fully, reopen Chrome, and try loading the site again. If the page still looks outdated, toggle Wi-Fi off briefly and load using cellular.
Google Chrome on Android
Open Chrome → tap the three dots in the upper-right → History → Clear Browsing Data → select Cached Images and Files → Clear Data. After that, close Chrome fully (swipe it away), reopen it, and refresh the site. If needed, switch between Wi-Fi and mobile data to force your phone to fetch the updated DNS information.
⭐ Firefox on Windows / Mac
In Firefox desktop, click the menu (three horizontal lines) → Settings → Privacy & Security. Under Cookies and Site Data, click Clear Data and check Cached Web Content, then clear it. You may also use Shift+Reload (hold Shift and click the Reload button) to bypass cached content just once.
Firefox on iPhone / Android
Open Firefox → tap the menu → Settings → Delete Browsing Data → make sure Cache is selected → Delete Browsing Data. Close and reopen Firefox, then reload the site.
If none of the above works
In rare cases, your internet provider’s DNS servers take longer to update. You can try switching between Wi-Fi and cellular data, restarting your device, or waiting 10–20 minutes and trying again. The issue resolves automatically once your network sees the new server.

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