Question:
What are cookies and cached files?
James curry
2007-10-20 05:54:30 UTC
When entering web pages or running programs on the net, files need to be cached (basically unpacked) but what is the exact meaning of cached files and cookies?
Four answers:
anonymous
2007-10-20 16:55:46 UTC
Web Cache- is also known as the temporary internet folder. It contains your temporary internet files.The web cache is the primary folder that holds your previously viewed web pages and images.



Cookies are used to record your surf history. This is one of prime reason why you are targeted by spammers. A cookie can sometimes be nothing more than a spy stealing as much information as it can before discovered or deleted. So its is either working on your side or working against you. Sadly, cookies have become a digital tool to steal information. Delete cookie history files just to be safe.

http://www.delete-computer-history.com/delete-pc-internet-history.html
Goutam
2007-10-20 05:59:17 UTC
Dear



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COOKIE

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message given to a Web browser by a Web server. The browser stores the message in a text file. The message is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server.



Also see session cookie and persistent cookie.



The main purpose of cookies is to identify users and possibly prepare customized Web pages for them. When you enter a Web site using cookies, you may be asked to fill out a form providing such information as your name and interests. This information is packaged into a cookie and sent to your Web browser which stores it for later use. The next time you go to the same Web site, your browser will send the cookie to the Web server. The server can use this information to present you with custom Web pages. So, for example, instead of seeing just a generic welcome page you might see a welcome page with your name on it.



The name cookie derives from UNIX objects called magic cookies. These are tokens that are attached to a user or program and change depending on the areas entered by the user or program.



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Cache

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Pronounced cash, a special high-speed storage mechanism. It can be either a reserved section of main memory or an independent high-speed storage device. Two types of caching are commonly used in personal computers: memory caching and disk caching.



A memory cache, sometimes called a cache store or RAM cache, is a portion of memory made of high-speed static RAM (SRAM) instead of the slower and cheaper dynamic RAM (DRAM) used for main memory. Memory caching is effective because most programs access the same data or instructions over and over. By keeping as much of this information as possible in SRAM, the computer avoids accessing the slower DRAM.



Some memory caches are built into the architecture of microprocessors. The Intel 80486 microprocessor, for example, contains an 8K memory cache, and the Pentium has a 16K cache. Such internal caches are often called Level 1 (L1) caches. Most modern PCs also come with external cache memory, called Level 2 (L2) caches. These caches sit between the CPU and the DRAM. Like L1 caches, L2 caches are composed of SRAM but they are much larger.



Disk caching works under the same principle as memory caching, but instead of using high-speed SRAM, a disk cache uses conventional main memory. The most recently accessed data from the disk (as well as adjacent sectors) is stored in a memory buffer. When a program needs to access data from the disk, it first checks the disk cache to see if the data is there. Disk caching can dramatically improve the performance of applications, because accessing a byte of data in RAM can be thousands of times faster than accessing a byte on a hard disk.



When data is found in the cache, it is called a cache hit, and the effectiveness of a cache is judged by its hit rate. Many cache systems use a technique known as smart caching, in which the system can recognize certain types of frequently used data. The strategies for determining which information should be kept in the cache constitute some of the more interesting problems in computer science.



Goutam
michaelsmith123456789123456789
2007-10-20 05:59:52 UTC
cookies-This is a collection of information, usually including a username and the current date and time, stored on the local computer of a person using the Internet. It is used by websites to identify users who have previously registered or visited the site.



cached files- web browser or web server feature which stores copies of web pages on a computer's hard disk
Funky G
2007-10-20 06:00:10 UTC
Cached files are files that get downloaded from the website but are stored on your pc for quick access next time you access the page.



Cookies are files that hold info on what you have done on the site. Ie your username, age, sex , location etc anything you enter to the site.



Its so when you visit next time, text boxes can be auto filled for you.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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