Word: browser
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...FIND ONE? When you start your Web browser, you are automatically connected to a portal (usually Netscape's or Microsoft's). Enter the address of a portal you want to visit (say, yahoo.com) and hit return...
...enters their name givesinstructions for logging on. Users, whose e-mailaddress must end with .edu, enter a list of peoplethey would be interested in dating. If someone onthis list logs on and lists the person who namedhim, then both persons receive an e-mail message.Simply press update on your browser, and a matchis made...
...longer advocate the "turn your cookie off" solution to Web browsing. Cookies--data strings in your browser that identify you--can be used to determine when you last visited a website and what you saw there. Unfortunately, if you disable them (through your browser's preferences menu) you can't get into websites that require cookies. And if you opt for the middle ground--warn me if anyone wants my cookie--you end up going crazy since many sites request them dozens of times. Fortunately, there's Anonymizer...
...computers, making it impossible to intercept and trace back. Note, though, that you can't receive replies. By summer, Cottrell hopes to improve the service with something called a Nym (for pseudonym) Server that allows you to maintain untraceable, two-way e-mail under multiple aliases. The anonymous Web browser and Mixmaster are available for free tryouts on the company's website at www.anonymizer.com (though there's a 20-second delay on the browser to encourage people to pay for the service). Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go order some books, wine and pharmaceuticals online...
...course, there?s nothing the media -- or the prosecution, for that matter -- likes better than a little doctored tape. The videotaped demonstration was intended to demonstrate that removing Microsoft?s Internet Explorer web browser from a computer running the Windows 98 operating system would make that machine run significantly more slowly. This would support Microsoft?s point that the browser was an integral part of the operating system, and thus that Microsoft couldn?t be accused of leveraging its near-monopoly on operating systems to gain market share for its browser. MORE...