eHow launches Android app: Get the best of eHow on the go.
Showing 1-31 of 31 results
Your web browser history is a record of the websites that you have visited within a set period of time. If you want to revisit a site that you've seen recently, you can access your history and see...
Cookies are a string of text that is stored in your browser that helps the website remember that you were there. (Cookies are used to make websites more personal or make online sales and services...
The conspiracy theory behind most computer issues is that some company had something to do with it. However, the facts show that whether good or bad, everything that involves a computer is...
Internet browsers come with features that make it easy for you to return to your favorite websites. Browsers remember the websites you visit, the information you type into web forms, and the terms...
When you set up an account with a retail website, the site will often store bits of your personal data in a form called cookies. Internet cookies can contain your password, credit card information...
Spam pop-up ads are not just annoying when browsing the Internet; they can also be dangerous because hackers use them to download tracking cookies and other malicious programs that can damage your...
Cookies are small files (not larger than 4 kilobytes) that are automatically downloaded on your computer after visiting Internet websites. Cookies store website preferences and help to identify a...
Tracking cookies are the part of the Internet browsing history that any web browser saves on your computer. Cookies store user website preferences, login information and even online shopping carts...
Whenever you search the Internet, you are leaving breadcrumbs on your computer leading to where you have been. Deleting just the history will not remove all the breadcrumbs from the trail you have...
Internet browsers save a detailed history of website surfing on your computer. Cookies are a part of the Internet history that store user preferences for particular websites, contents of online...
Web browsers store information about everything you do on the Internet. While that may sound like a scary thought, it has its good and bad. Before you can deal with Internet history, it's...
Cookies are files that your computer saves as you browse the Internet. The cookies slow your computer down and, in some cases, keep your browser from opening certain Web pages. You might know the...
JavaScripting is a language that is used by many websites to improve functionality, validate forms and detect browsers. For websites to perform optimally, it has to be enabled. Cookies are small...
If, for any reason, you want to peruse the Internet history on a computer, there are a few ways to do it. You can work through the History folder, which can be accessed from the toolbar at the top...
Imagine if every place you visited for a week gave you a small bag of cookies to carry around. On top of that, every time you revisited a place, they made you show your bag of cookies or gave you...
If web surfing anonymity is important to you, there's a good chance you don't want website owners to track other websites you visit, what you buy on those websites and other personal information...
Most users browse the Internet daily unaware of the processes and technology working behind the scenes to deliver the dynamic content of the various Internet sites available today. One of the...
A computer cookie is a text file which is stored on the computer of someone who visits a website. Website developers use cookies not only for advertising purposes, but to keep running totals of...
A tracking cookie is a temporary file that some Web sites use to track the browsing behaviors of their users. These cookies are not generally harmful and do not pass on identifying personal...
If you want to see what's been viewed on a computer or if you want to find a website that you visited, but can't quite remember the name of, you'll need to check your computer's history and...
Computer cookies are text files that are saved on your computer. They save information on your hard drive that can later be accessed by a web server. Cookies can be convenient in some ways, but...
Cookies are bits of personal information stored on your computer's web browser. Some cookies are helpful, such as those that store your passwords or user names with your permission. Others are...
A computer cookie is used to store information on your computer from websites you visit. Often times, this information is used to help certain data load faster and to store usernames and passwords...
Unwanted tracking cookies can slow down and clutter up a hard drive, as well as compromise the security of your computer. The ways to get rid of cookies are as varied as the numerous browsers in...
The vast majority of Internet cookies are not very complex in design; in fact, they are fairly simple. However, due to the increase in media attention to Internet privacy in 2000, Internet cookies...
Your browser uses small pieces of text called cookies to authenticate and maintain specific information about users, such as site preferences or the contents of their electronic shopping...
When you surf the Internet, sites collect information from you. Sites you visit place a small text file on your computer to store information gathered when you visit their site. Such information...
Your computer sends an information request to every website it visits. A server replies and the information loads into your browser. Cookies are electronic placeholders for information. At a...
When you visit a website, the server may place a cookie on your hard drive. These very small files (which got their nickname from the trail of cookie crumbs you might leave behind you) contain...
Cookies are text files that are automatically downloaded to your hard drive by Web sites to make Web browsing easier. If you have security concerns or feel the cookies are taking up too much...
Cookies are text documents that Web sites save onto your hard disk so that the sites will "remember" you on your next visit. For example, the cookie file might record the links you clicked on the...