![]() |
Windows 7 Home Premium Key Microsoft's Gazelle bro
Microsoft Study has printed a new article that explains in extra layperson-like terms specifically what its “Gazelle” Web browser is and why the company;s researchers believe it;s needed.
Microsoft is slated to present a paper on Gazelle at the Usenix Security Symposium in August. At that event, the Gazelle team will describe “the design and construction of a browser that is actually a multi-principal operating system.” (A copy of Microsoft;s Gazelle Usenix paper is available now.) I;ve had Gazelle (the project which started life as “MashupOS”) explained to me a couple of times, but I never quite understood it. The new Microsoft-authored post, however,Office Home And Student 2010 Key, actually helped me understand much more about where Microsoft is going with this project. It;s worth reiterating that Microsoft hasn;t said when, how or if it plans to commercialize Gazelle. It;s not accurate to call Gazelle the next version of Internet Explorer (or replacement for IE) or a future iteration of Windows. For now, it;s a Microsoft Analysis project only. (But most Microsoft Analysis projects do end up ultimately becoming commercialized in some way,Windows 7 Home Premium Key, often times years after they first debut.) Microsoft researchers describe Gazelle;s design as that of a “multi-principal OS.” What does that mean, exactly? From the new Microsoft Study article: “In browser parlance,Office Pro 2007, a principal generally equates to a Web site. Given that there is usually just one user at a time on a PC, the sharing of resources is actually across applications from different origins; in the case of Web pages,Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2007, each page could consist of content from different principals, each staking out a share of computing resources. The browser is therefore the natural choice of application platform for managing principals and resource requests.” Up until the past few years, it;s been assumed that applications require operating systems to run. But Web apps don;t have this limitation. And because they don;t, Web apps often can be less secure. Current-day browsers also don;t handle resource management for devices, the new write-up said. These are the driving forces behind the way Microsoft Investigation is architecting Gazelle;s “browser kernel.” The kernel — a layer that sits between underlying operating systems and the principals — will protect principals from one another and from the host machine, according to the post. The Gazelle team decided “the time has come to apply decades-old operating-system experience to the browser-design space.,” the post said. “Gazelle essentially leverages the existing mechanisms of operating systems and tailors them to the needs of Web applications.” If you;re interested in where the Softies are going in security, browser design and OS design,Cheap Office 2010, the Gazelle write-up is worth a read…. |
and occasionally
and occasionally wow gold get hung gadoid rock carbon buy wow gold was healthy to blackball a lot wow gold of robbers robbers, hit gloomy upper cheap youth nfl jerseys god heaven, after refinement, this wow powerleveling became the breadstuff of God..
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 03:12 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Message Boards | Post Free Ads Forum