enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Private browsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_browsing

    Private browsing modes are commonly used for various purposes, such as concealing visits to sensitive websites (like adult-oriented content) from the browsing history, conducting unbiased web searches unaffected by previous browsing habits or recorded interests, offering a "clean" temporary session for guest users (for instance, on public computers), [7] and managing multiple accounts on ...

  3. Quirks mode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quirks_mode

    In computing, quirks mode is an approach used by web browsers to maintain backward compatibility with web pages designed for old web browsers, instead of strictly complying with web standards in standards mode. This behavior has since been codified, so what was previously standards mode is now referred to as simply no quirks mode.

  4. How to turn on incognito mode on your computer and phone to ...

    www.aol.com/news/turn-incognito-mode-computer...

    Incognito mode, also known as private browsing mode, stops your web browser from saving data about you as you browse. ... When you're done, just close the window to exit incognito mode. Google Chrome.

  5. Browser security - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_security

    Web browsers can be breached in one or more of the following ways: Operating system is breached and malware is reading/modifying the browser memory space in privilege mode [5] Operating system has a malware running as a background process, which is reading/modifying the browser memory space in privileged mode; Main browser executable can be hacked

  6. Google Chrome's massive changes threaten the open web - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/google-chromes-massive...

    In a move designed to safeguard the privacy of web users, Google will end the use of third-party cookies on its Chrome browser, doing away with one of the commercial web's foundational technologies.

  7. Bus snooping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_snooping

    One is a source filter that is located at a cache side and performs filtering before coherence traffic reaches the shared bus. Another is a destination filter that is located at receiver caches and prevents unnecessary cache-tag look-ups at the receiver core, but this type of filtering fails to prevent the initial coherence message from the source.

  8. MSI protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSI_protocol

    Modern systems use variants of the MSI protocol to reduce the amount of traffic in the coherency interconnect. The MESI protocol adds an "Exclusive" state to reduce the traffic caused by writes of blocks that only exist in one cache.

  9. Google Safe Browsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Safe_Browsing

    Google Safe Browsing is a service from Google that warns users when they attempt to navigate to a dangerous website or download dangerous files. Safe Browsing also notifies webmasters when their websites are compromised by malicious actors and helps them diagnose and resolve the problem.