Removed superfluous entries.

Binh.
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binh 2005-03-01 10:30:54 +00:00
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@ -338,18 +338,6 @@ A programming language based on C developed in 1996 by Sun Microsystems. It was
</glossdef>
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<glossentry>
<glossterm>
Java
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<glossdef>
<para>
A simple, object-oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture-neutral, portable, multithreaded, dynamic, buzzword-compliant, general-purpose programming language developed by Sun Microsystems in 1995(?). Java supports programming for the Internet in the form of platform-independent Java &quot;applets&quot;. From Linux Guide @FirstLinux
<ulink url="http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html">http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html</ulink>
</para>
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Java
@ -374,18 +362,6 @@ An object-oriented programming language developed by Sun Microsystems. to be ope
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Java
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<para>
Computer programming language developed by Sun Microsystems; popular because of its ability to be compiled and run on several different computer architectures. From Redhat-9-Glossary
<ulink url="http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html">http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html</ulink>
</para>
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Java
@ -398,18 +374,6 @@ Java is a network-friendly programming language invented by Sun Microsystems. Ja
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Java
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<para>
Key point: Browsers include a &quot;virtual machine&quot; that encapsulates the Java program and prevents it from accessing your local machine. The theory behind this is that a Java &quot;applet&quot; is really content like graphics rather than full application software. However, as of July, 2000, all known browsers have had bugs in their Java virtual machines that would allow hostile applets to &quot;break out&quot; of this &quot;sandbox&quot; and access other parts of the system. Point: Most security experts browse with Java disabled on their computers, or encapsulate it with further sandboxes/virtual-machines. From Hacking-Lexicon
<ulink url="http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html">http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Dictionary/html/index.html</ulink>
</para>
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Java Applets