clearing web history

  • Thread starter Thread starter bucster
  • Start date Start date
Well I suppose you want us to guess what "surfing tracks" means, so
here's my stab at it: In Internet Explorer go to Tools > Internet
Options > General tab and click the Clear History, Delete Cookies and
Delete Files buttons.
 
A quick and reliable way is to use the freeware program CCleaner.
www.ccleaner.com
You will find that it willclear out temporary internet files, history,
cookies and a whole lot more. I've used this invaluable application for
years now and am very pleased with it.

--
John Barnett MVP
Associate Expert
http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org
http://vistasupport.mvps.org

The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any
kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy,
reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for
any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the
use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this
mail/post..
 
John

"I've used this invaluable application for years now "

The first mention of it in Google is January 2004!

It is a useful tool!


--

Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England

Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Gerry Cornell said:
John

"I've used this invaluable application for years now "

The first mention of it in Google is January 2004!

How did you determine that? Is there a special query modifier to sort/search by date?
 
Not to be picky, of course, but 2004 to 2006 does technically count as
"years".

Oh forget it! :-)
 
Alec

Advanced Search. Return messages posted between.


--

Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England

Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Not from my point of view there isn't. The point i was making is that 'i've
used it for a long time and can recommend it.'

--
John Barnett MVP
Associate Expert
http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org
http://vistasupport.mvps.org

The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any
kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy,
reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for
any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the
use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this
mail/post..
 
John Barnett MVP wrote (in news:[email protected]):
Alec S. wrote (in news:[email protected]):

Not from my point of view there isn't.

Actually the connotation is *specifically* from your point of view. You said
it.
The point i was making is that 'i've used it for a long time and can recommend
it.'

Exactly. Technically, "years" means two or more so in this case it
/technically/ applies. However when people say "for year", they don't usually
mean "for two or more years", but rahter "for a long time"/"for many, many
years". People don't usually say "for years" when they mean only two, in that
case they would say "for a couple of years". You said "for years" to indicate a
feeling of a long time, not to mean specifically two or more.
 
Back
Top