Interesting read
Interesting read
I'm sure the other browsers will be following suit shortly
I'm sure the other browsers will be following suit shortly
I seriously hope Firefox does, so it could just automatically remove them when closing the browser then having to use tools like CCleaner and/or BleachBit wouldn't even be necessary to get rid of them.
Once a browser develops something, all of the others hop on the train. Heck, look at "Do not track"
Once a browser develops something, all of the others hop on the train. Heck, look at "Do not track"
I enabled the don't track feature in Firefox v4 (it's in 'Tools->Options->Advanced') however it's all entirely up to websites to respect that setting.
Yeah, and I'm pretty sure most don't.
you can check out this Firefox add-on, then. I use it.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/betterprivacy/
Nice find, Ishan
Though I don't really see what the pie has to do with the addon delicious nonetheless
I seriously hope Firefox does, so it could just automatically remove them when closing the browser then having to use tools like CCleaner and/or BleachBit wouldn't even be necessary to get rid of them.
If you want to do that, use Private Browsing. Flash respects it and deletes cookies upon exit now
If you want to do that, use Private Browsing. Flash respects it and deletes cookies upon exit now
Thanks for that info, I didn't know that!
It's quite recent - 10.1 I believe. Not that Adobe has a track record for supporting new things early.
Still waiting for a 64bit flash that works...the RC (last time I used it) didn't register with any site (I was told to download flash by pretty much every site..)
The only 64 bit browser on Windows is IE, and its 64 bit version is not "we do a 64 bit version for users", but rather "we have to do a 64 bit browser...oh noes...", and the 64 bit version uses a not-so-good JS engine.
A 64 bit version of Flash isn't really needed...until Mozilla does a 64 bit version of Firefox (or Google with Chrome)