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SLATE tosses its cookies.
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Slate
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Tosses Its Cookies
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One can lead a happy and
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fulfilling life, and even use the Internet contentedly, without understanding
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"cookies." So if you don't know what "cookies" are--in the computer sense--go
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in peace and consider yourself fortunate. But if you have ventured into the
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wonderful world of cookies, you may be one of those folks who is alarmed about
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them. This is completely unnecessary. Cookies are merely special messages a Web
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site's computer sends to your computer when you drop by to visit--for example,
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"Have a nice day," or, "End child abuse now," or, "Wipe out this person's hard
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drive on his next birthday," or, "Psst ... hey, buddy. Yeah, you with the
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pathetic 486 chip and the broken CD-ROM. Mr. G says there's an extra 8 megs of
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memory for you if you crash when she tries to install Netscape." All perfectly
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innocent.
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Nevertheless, a few cookie
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paranoiacs have set their browsers to alert them when a cookie is heading their
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way. And some of them have complained that this notice pops up a lot when
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they're reading Slate. Slate actually uses very few cookies. For example, we
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tell your browser to remember the date of your visit. When you come back the
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next time, your computer sends that date back to ours. If it's still the same
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day, we don't feed you the cover again but take you straight to the Table of
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Contents. Similarly, we use cookies to remember whether you prefer your
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contents listed by page number or by date of posting, and to remember which
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entry in a "Dispatch" or "Dialogue" you last read. All perfectly innocent.
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But we
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did investigate these complaints, and it turned out that our server computers
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were sending jars and jars of cookies we didn't need. To emphasize: This was
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information from us going into your computer, not information
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from you going into ours. And it really was harmless stuff. Nevertheless, we
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have turned off these superfluous cookies. If you don't believe us, or if that
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doesn't satisfy you, your browser can screen or block all cookies. On Microsoft
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Internet Explorer, just click on "View," then "Options," and choose the
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"Advanced" tab. Of course, is Microsoft really alerting you to all incoming
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cookies--or only to other people's cookies? We merely ask.
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Fore!
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That sense of excitement in
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the air ... the soaring stock market ... the summer weather that has lasted
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beyond its normal term ... the sudden improvement in scansion and rhyme in
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American poetry: These welcome developments can have only two possible
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explanations. One is El Niño, the fashionable weather trend that, as David
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Plotz explains in this week's "Assessment,"
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explains everything. The other explanation is the imminent arrival of IE4, the
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fourth generation of Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web-browser software. Slate,
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of course, is determined to bring the same degree of objectivity and hype
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resistance to this event that we legendarily brought to our coverage of the
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birth of Jesus some 2,000 years ago--an occasion the release of IE4, as it
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happens, closely resembles.
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Click
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here to
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download IE4. (And, what the heck, click here to download Netscape's fourth-generation browser.) Slate is
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already adding features to take advantage of IE4's enormous power, beauty, and
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sophistication. For example, if you have IE4 installed, when you click on an
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author's name a short bio pops up (instead of the click taking you to the bio
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at the bottom of the page). Not just that, but ... well, yes, just that for the
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moment. But there's lots more coming. Just so you're prepared.
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--Michael Kinsley
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