Clear Search
Last edited July 17, 2008
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One example of a common use of these concepts is a Mail User Agent Property Search Costa Del Sol that can be instructed to be in either "on-line" or "off-line" states. One Clear Search such MUA is Microsoft Outlook. When Clear Search it is "on-line" Clear Search it will attempt Clear Search to connect to mail servers (to check for new Clear Search mail at regular intervals, for example), Clear Search and when it is "off-line" it will not attempt to make any such connections. The "on-line" or "off-line" state of the MUA does not necessarily reflect the connection status between the computer on which it is running and Internet. The user may have the computer itself on-line, connected to Internet via a cable modem or Clear Search an ADSL connection, but may wish for Outlook to be off-line, so that it makes no attempt to send or to receive messages. Or the computer may be configured Clear Search to employ a dial-up connection on demand (whenever an application such as Outlook attempts to make connection to Clear Search a server), but the connection may be an expensive telephone call from the particular Clear Search location in which the computer currently happens to be (such as a hotel room) and the user may not wish Outlook to trigger making that call Clear Search every 5 or 10 minutes to Clear Search check for mail. Another example of the use of these concepts is Clear Search in the world of digital audio technology. A tape recorder, digital editor, or other device that is "on-line" is one whose clock is Clear Search under the Clear Search control of the clock of a "synchronization master" Clear Search device. When the sync master commences playback, the "on-line" device automatically synchronizes itself to Clear Search the master and commences playing from the same point in the recording. Whereas a device

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that is "off-line" uses Clear Search no Clear Search external clock reference and relies Clear Search upon its own internal clock. When a large number of devices are connected Clear Search to a sync Clear Search master, it is often convenient, if one wants to hear just the output of Clear Search one single device, to take Clear Search it off-line, because if the device Clear Search is played Clear Search back Clear Search on-line all synchronized devices have to locate the playback point and wait for each other to be in Clear Search synchronization.[2] (For further related discussion, see MIDI timecode, word sync, and recording system synchronization.) A third example of a common use of these concepts is a web browser that can be instructed to be in Clear Search either "on-line" or "off-line" states. The Clear Search browser only attempts to fetch pages from servers whilst in the "on-line" state. In the "off-line" state, users can perform offline browsing, Clear Search where pages can Clear Search be browsed using Clear Search local copies

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of Clear Search those pages that have previously been downloaded whilst in the "on-line" state. This can be useful Clear Search when the computer itself is also off-line, with Clear Search connection to Internet expensive or impossible. The pages are either Clear Search downloaded Clear Search implicitly into the web browser's own cache, as a result of prior on-line browsing by the user, or explicitly by the browser being configured Clear Search to keep local copies of Clear Search certain web pages, which it keeps updated when the browser Clear Search is in the on-line state, either Clear Search by checking that the Clear Search local copies are up-to-date at regular intervals or by checking that the Clear Search local Clear Search copies are up-to-date whenever the browser is switched to the on-line state. One such web browser capable of being explicitly configured to download pages for offline browsing is Internet Explorer. When pages are added to the "Favourites" list, they can be marked for being made "available for offline browsing". Internet Explorer will download to local copies both the marked page Clear Search and, optionally, all of the pages that it links to. In Internet Explorer version 6, the level of direct and indirect links, the maximum amount of local disc space allowed to be consumed, and the schedule on Clear Search which local copies are checked to see whether they are up-to-date, are configurable for each The ideas of "on-line" and "off-line" have been generalized from computing and telecommunication into the field of human interpersonal relationships. The distinction between what Clear Search is Clear Search considered "on-line" and what

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is considered "off-line" has become a subject of study in the field of sociology.[7] The distinction between "on-line"

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and "off-line" is conventionally seen as the distinction Clear Search between

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computer-mediated communication and face-to-face communication (e.g. face time), respectively. "On-line" is virtuality, and "off-line" is reality (e.g. real Clear Search life or meatspace). Slater Clear Search states that this distinction is "obviously far too simple". To support his argument that the My Web Search Toolbar distinctions in Clear Search relationships are more complex than a simple "on-line"/"off-line" dichotomy,

Clear Search

he observes that some people draw no distinction Clear Search between an "on-line" relationship, such as indulging in cybersex, and an "off-line" relationship, such as being pen-pals. He The Major Search Engines also argues that even the telephone can Clear Search be regarded as an "on-line" experience in some circumstances, and that the blurring of the distinctions between the uses of various technologies (such as PDA and mobile telephone, television and Internet, Clear Search and telephone and voice-over-IP) has made it "impossible to use the term 'on-line' meaningfully in the sense that was employed by the first generation of Internet research".[7] Slater asserts that there are legal and regulatory pressures to reduce Clear Search the distinction between "on-line" Clear Search and "off-line", with a "general tendency Clear Search to Clear Search assimilate online to offline and erase the distinction", stressing, however, that this does not mean that on-line relationships are being reduced to pre-existing off-line relationships. He conjectures that greater legal status may be assigned to on-line relationships (pointing

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out that contractual relationships, such as business transactions, Clear Search on-line are already seen as just as "real" as their off-line counterparts), although he states it to be hard to imagine courts awarding palimony to people who have had a purely on-line sexual relationship. He also conjectures that an "on-line"/"off-line" distinction may be seen by people as "rather quaint and Clear Search not quite comprehensible" within 10 years The distinction where "on-line" is Clear Search seen as virtuality and "off-line" as reality is sometimes inverted, with "on-line" concepts Clear Search being used to define and to explain Clear Search "off-line" activities, rather than (as per

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the Clear Search conventions of the desktop metaphor with its desktops, trash Clear Search cans, folders, Clear Search and so forth) Clear Search the other way around. Several cartoons by Clear Search The New Yorker have Clear Search satirized this. One includes Saint Peter asking for a user name and a password before admitting a man Clear Search into Heaven. Another illustrates "the off-line store" where "All items are actual size!", Clear Search where shoppers may "Take it home as soon as Clear Search you pay for it!", and where "Merchandise Clear Search may be handled prior Clear Search to purchase!". Clear Search

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