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Full Discussion: Executable files
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Executable files Post 302142853 by nervous on Tuesday 30th of October 2007 12:52:12 AM
Old 10-30-2007
Porter

Some body told me like this:

"I think it totally depends upon the OS, provided it abstracts hardware efficiently. For example, Windows is meant for x86 architechture. Someday Microsoft comes up with Windows for SPARC that uses same system calls, i.e. H/W is abstracted. Any Win32 program would run on that too.

Virtual Machines (such as JVM) do exactly that. They provide a consistent set of instructions to the programs accross platforms. Underneath these instructions are executed differently on different systems."


What you say now?
 

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HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			       HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3)

NAME
HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft - access to Microsoft cookies files SYNOPSIS
use LWP; use HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft; use Win32::TieRegistry(Delimiter => "/"); my $cookies_dir = $Registry-> {"CUser/Software/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/Explorer/Shell Folders/Cookies"}; $cookie_jar = HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft->new( file => "$cookies_dir\index.dat", 'delayload' => 1, ); my $browser = LWP::UserAgent->new; $browser->cookie_jar( $cookie_jar ); DESCRIPTION
This is a subclass of "HTTP::Cookies" which loads Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.x and 6.x for Windows (MSIE) cookie files. See the documentation for HTTP::Cookies. METHODS
The following methods are provided: $cookie_jar = HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft->new; The constructor takes hash style parameters. In addition to the regular HTTP::Cookies parameters, HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft recognizes the following: delayload: delay loading of cookie data until a request is actually made. This results in faster runtime unless you use most of the cookies since only the domain's cookie data is loaded on demand. CAVEATS
Please note that the code DOESN'T support saving to the MSIE cookie file format. AUTHOR
Johnny Lee <typo_pl@hotmail.com> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2002 Johnny Lee This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.1 2009-06-13 HTTP::Cookies::Microsoft(3)
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