Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback Reply to Big B. Firstly let me point out that the files that are altered are not system files at all. They are simply archives and as such it is safe to alter the content. This means that cookies set by websites are associated with the made up name...
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 12, 2005, 0:07]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback NJ/ Student, It isn't as simple as being 'nothing to fear' because the cache at Google stores the cookies too (from the way I read the description) I am doing no wrong, but would not want the next user of a Forum to be logged in as a Moderator...
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 9, 2005, 19:33]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback "One solution is to use a made up user name in your operating system registration file. Just do a search for OS files using the user name you registered it with as the search criteria and change the name to one you made up.
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 9, 2005, 10:28]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback So, if I use a webmail system while this is running on my computer(most webmails doesn't use SSL), this system will cache the information. Then someone else can access the same server and potentially read my mails.
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 8, 2005, 20:47]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback I don't think people realise just how many programs record information about their usage. It is not just Google that does this. Microsoft Media Player, Real player and others watch and report back on usage and also on things like ripping and...
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 8, 2005, 20:06]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback If you'e got nothing to hide you've got nothing to fear.
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 7, 2005, 17:11]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback "If you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear" Yeah yeah, thats what the North Korean government tells its people all the time.
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[October 30, 2005, 15:54]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback [Headslaps] Wrong. The privacy fears are not about information being cached on your computer. The problem is that it is cached on Google's machines, and frequently viewed pages that are not secure but which might still contain personal information...
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 5, 2005, 18:55]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback Ok youve got it wrong and didnt even download the Acellerator or you would know it has an option for Dialup users also .Its just been optimised for broadband.
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[May 5, 2005, 18:08]
Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
Talkback The NJ STUDENT wrote: "If you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear. Wonder where he got that radical neo-con line? Inexperience. Look at Yahoo, MSN & AOL now WILLINGLY giving all the data the government wants, primarily from their...
About: Google Web Accelerator sparks privacy fears
[March 19, 2006, 5:36]
Large Hadron Collider up and running again
Blog The world's biggest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, is in operation again after more than a year of repairs. The particle accelerator, which is in an underground location spanning the French-Swiss border, was started up for the...
[November 20, 2009, 23:03 in News Blog by Karen Friar]
LHC disaster.
Talkback September 24, 2008 - 'LHC on hold until spring of 2009' - PhysicsWorld.com: "The magnet failure last week at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) means that the accelerator will not be up and running again until early spring of 2009, say officials at...
About: Cern CIO: Supporting the LHC's computing backbone
[October 21, 2008, 21:23 by SaneScienceOrg]
RE: Dell still gets thumbs up
Blog Comment GRAPHICS CARD Intel® Media Accelerator 950 Graphics Up to 256MB shared graphics memory edit Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X3100 Intel® Pentium® Dual-Core T2130 Processor (1.86GHz,533MHz,1MB L2 cache) edit
[October 15, 2007, 17:34 by chrishocking]
RE: Microsoft's Mojave just a desert vista
Blog Comment Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) X3100 http://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Graphics-Media-Accelerator-X3100.2176.0.html Microsoft's "Vista isn't really as bad as people say" publicity campaign is doomed.
[August 11, 2008, 17:41 by anonymous5678]
IBM ThinkPad T40
Member Review Well actually I own a T40p and this is kind of a late reveiw since T42p is comming , but anyway the only chnages are the HD accelerator protection add and more speed. This model represents the ultimate quality -- if you have concerns with spending...
[June 7, 2004, 10:31]
Bright new future of multicore, circa 1994
Blog It's an accelerator! An article in German tech publication c't sheds a bit more light on Larrabee, Intel's much anticipated multicore chip. It's a graphics engine! It's going to wipe out nVidia with ray-tracing!
[July 9, 2008, 13:58 in News Blog by Rupert Goodwins]
HP Compaq NX9005
Member Review Have installed Linux on a partition, although I am having some problems with the graphics accelerator being recognised by xserver. Works brilliantly. Using it for my final-year degree project to run PHP, PERL, VRML and MySQL.
[October 29, 2003, 8:53]
LHC - what actually happens when superconducting magnets go wrong...
Blog Bad electrical connection" is a layman's explanation of what accelerator physicists refer to as a "quench". I came across a very interesting explanation of what actually happens in an incident such as the one which felled the LHC, from Vern Paxson...
[October 30, 2008, 14:23 in Rupert's Diary by Rupert Goodwins]
Bits of Shiny Broken Windows
Blog I have it running on a DELL 755, its an Intel chipset with a 2.4GHz Celeron cpu with the stock on-board video chip, a “graphics accelerator” 3100. I've been poking at Windows 7 Beta at work. The flying monkeys in Redmond might have something going.
[March 20, 2009, 1:22 in Homebrew Blog by Xwindowsjunkie]
Intel Larrabee roadmap -- who says there ain't no Santa Cores?
Blog Picking my way carefully through the Googleised Japanese, it appears that the first product Larrabee may appear in is a PCI Express 2 accelerator card - mostly for graphics, but with plenty of other options for tasks that like lots of high speed...
[June 14, 2007, 14:41 in News Blog by Rupert Goodwins]



