Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mozilla Firefox supports DNS prefetching, as of version 3.5. [9]Google Chrome supports prefetching of linked web content by "prerendering", as of version 11. [10]Internet Explorer supports prefetching of IP addresses by "DNS prefetching", as of version 9.
In versions of Firefox that display a single, orange "Firefox" button: click the "Firefox" button and click "Options". Select the "Advanced" section, and go to the "Network" tab, and click the "Clear Now" button. Then click "OK". When Firefox displays a menu bar, from the "Edit" or "Tools" menu, choose "Preferences" or "Options".
Select the browser for which you wish to disable the AutoComplete feature: Internet Explorer 7.0 and higher; Internet Explorer 6.0; Mozilla Firefox; Google Chrome; To disable the AutoComplete feature on Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.0 and higher: 1. Open Internet Explorer. 2. On the Tools menu, click Internet Options. 3.
While I am unable to cite a source, anyone who has followed the steps (disabling in registry, deleting select/all files in the prefetch folder) will notice that their boot times will decrease. People disputing this often include the load time for explorer.exe (the Windows GUI shell) which is noticeably increased.
As of Firefox 28, Mozilla has announced they are deprecating CRL in favour of OCSP. [4] CRL files may grow quite large over time e.g. in US government, for certain institution multiple megabytes. Therefore, incremental CRLs have been designed [14] sometimes referred to as "delta CRLs". However, only a few clients implement them. [15]
2 Instruction prefetch, cache prefetching, and prefetch input queue. 4 comments. Toggle the table of contents. Talk: Cache prefetching. Add languages.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Prefetch instruction
Diagram of a CPU memory cache operation. In computing, a cache (/ k æ ʃ / ⓘ KASH) [1] is a hardware or software component that stores data so that future requests for that data can be served faster; the data stored in a cache might be the result of an earlier computation or a copy of data stored elsewhere.