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  2. X session manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_session_manager

    From the point of view of an X session manager, a session is a “state of the desktop” at a given time: a set of windows with their current content. More precisely, a session is the set of clients managing these windows or related to them and the information that allows these applications to restore the condition of these windows if required.

  3. Jimmy Page: Session Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Page:_Session_Man

    Jimmy Page: Session Man is a two-volume compilation album featuring tracks by various artists on which Jimmy Page performed as a session musician, recorded between 1963 and 1968. The album was released by AIP Records (a subsidiary of Bomp! Records) in 1989 (first volume) and the second was released in 1990. Some of the tracks were mastered from ...

  4. Session - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Session

    Computing. Session (computer science), a semi-permanent interactive information exchange between communicating devices. Session (web analytics), in web analytics, measuring a continuous period of browsing of a website by a particular user. Session, a group of process groups in POSIX -conformant operating systems. Login session.

  5. Poster session - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poster_session

    Poster session at the 111th American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, New Orleans, LA. A poster presentation, at a congress or conference with an academic or professional focus, is the presentation of research information in the form of a paper poster that conference participants may view.

  6. Session ID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Session_ID

    Session ID. In computer science, a session identifier, session ID or session token is a piece of data that is used in network communications (often over HTTPS) to identify a session, a series of related message exchanges. Session identifiers become necessary in cases where the communications infrastructure uses a stateless protocol such as HTTP.

  7. Wikipedia:FAQ/Technical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:FAQ/Technical

    Wikipedia currently runs on MediaWiki, created by Lee Daniel Crocker and written in PHP 7. We adopted this software in July 2002. Wikipedia originally ran on UseModWiki, a general wiki script by Clifford Adams written in Perl. In January 2002, we switched to the Phase II software written by Magnus Manske in PHP.

  8. Cross-site request forgery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery

    Cross-site request forgery, also known as one-click attack or session riding and abbreviated as CSRF (sometimes pronounced sea-surf [1]) or XSRF, is a type of malicious exploit of a website or web application where unauthorized commands are submitted from a user that the web application trusts. [2] There are many ways in which a malicious ...

  9. Social login - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_login

    Social login. Social login is a form of single sign-on using existing information from a social networking service such as Facebook, Twitter or Google, to login to a third party website instead of creating a new login account specifically for that website. It is designed to simplify logins for end users as well as provide more reliable ...