yes-- hit "start" then "programs" then "accessories" then "system tools" then "system restore" then click "next" & choose date you want it to restore back to so it will check history again. click "next again" & then "restart" so after that you can do "control/H" for history and it will be restored back to the date you chose to see the browsing history deleted.
That is impossible, unless you look deep into your computer which I don't know how to do.
What I use is a program called Recuva. You can download it for free. Go to Google and type in Recuva. I've never used it for web history but you can try it
If you mean internet, you go up to the top of your screen, and click HISTORY.
If you mean the computer, click on your trash/trashcan and you can see your deleted history of folders, files and dowloads.
You can't Coz the web browser had all your history on it and if it's deleted then you can't access it at all...you would have to try and find another way
Um...no,because it says that you can't undo the action.
Sorry, but there's no way to do that unless you're a computer engineer or something like that and you know about the computer really well. :(
You might if you use IE
Well no, but your Internet Service Provider can still pull a log up and see what websites you've been visiting. Even if you deleted your browser history.
Depends on what you mean by "history on your computer". Here are some ways to delete some of the stuff your computer stores about what you do on it. If you use firefox as your web browser ctrl+shift+delete deletes any private data your browser is storing about what websites you visit. There is a similar ability with IE. You should also make sure that there is not any spy ware on your computer collecting information. Adaware from lavasoft should kill most of it. Finally files that you delete on your hard drive are not really gone. They are just marked as rewritable. So until they get written over witch is hard to tell special software can still read the files you delete from your computer. to wipe out theese 'invisible' files your can defragment your hard drive which should clear it or there is some software that will rewrite over your whole drive however to make sure everything is gone.
The method of deleting internet history depends on the OS and browser. If you are using a Microsoft OS and MS Explorer: 1) Open a browser window 2) Go to Tools 3) Go to Internet Options Note: You can also go to Internet Options from the Control Panel 4) Under Browsing history, click on "Delete" 5) From there, you can close out the window and exit the browser You can also clear part of the browser history by going to "Favorites" then the "History" tab and then deleting all the days shown. This won't get rid of the most recently visited sites up in the address bar though. If you are using Firefox: 1) Open a browser window 2) Go to Tools 3) Go to the Privacy tab 4) Check the box for "Clear history when Firefox closes" 5) Close the Tools window 6) Close the browser To elminate some other residual information that could be used to reconstruct your internet history, you might also want to do two more things: 1) delete cookies and 2) go to the Start window, open All Programs, open Accessories, open Disk Cleanup, make sure "Temporary Internet Files" is checked, then click "OK" to delete the temporary files. Other browsers like Chrome or Opera have similar procedures to clear the browser history. With all that said, a person skilled in computer forensics can still recover most if not all of your internet history, so if you are trying to delete the history to cover up illegal activities - your only hope is to incinerate your computer, change your name, and flee to a country that doesn't allow extradition. If you are trying to cover up your browsing the internet at work to feed your particular kink - your employer can still reconstruct your browsing from the server logs (unless they have a lousy sysadmin) which you can't touch unless your ARE the sysadmin, so - behave yourself at work.
Yes, but for a casual PC user it is much to complicated. That is, if it has been properly removed. History is a temporary file, it is defaulted to be removed 20 days after you record it into the cache... To put it in English...AnswerYes,the normal "delete" procedures only puts it where you cannot see it. It is still on your hard drive. The only real way to remove all traces of everything on a hard-drive such that a computer forensic expert cannot retrieve it, is to make the hard drive "disappear".
roughly 1890 through 1960, it overlaps first and second generation electronic computers with some equipment still in use in the 1970s assisting third generation electronic computers for offline functions.
Well no, but your Internet Service Provider can still pull a log up and see what websites you've been visiting. Even if you deleted your browser history.
how can i restore my browser history tab after accidentally erasing it on my security management clean up program, the lists are still there but i have to highlight them so they can show up after asking for something eg.www empty unless i highlight it with the tab.
Yes, any pictures, videos, or soundtracks are kept in a different folder and must be deleted separately.
I have reset it but will the browser history be on my android?
I'm not sure you can however you could try using an application that will try to recover it since nothing is truly deleted because when you 'delete' something the computer just marks that storage as usable and as long as no new things have used that storage than its still there.
It does not because when I go into private browsing, which doesn't keep my history (almost the same thing as deleting my history), on my schools computer, it tells me that the sites I go to can still be tracked by their Internet Service Provider. Deleting your browser history only deletes it on your local hard drive where your browser resides. Your ISP is totally independent from your machine and what you do there has no effect on what is stored on the drives that your ISP has in their servers. To put it another way - when you delete your browser history, it doesn't change the information on your neighbor's computer - just yours.
Try closing the browser then re-opening it. If the problem still persists, restart your computer. If it STILL won't cooperate, try clearing the cookies and cache too.
It is working on my Google Chrome Browser, maybe it is the version of your browser or the computer your using. But the website itself is still up.
It should still be in the chat log folder, if not, it is untraceable.
Hi, It shows that you kept "keep history" on(ticked) in media player just make it off and try.
Probably a bug in browser. Delete all Cookie and Session Data using Clear History and then restart your browser and server. It would be better to restart the whole PC after cleaning browser data
Depends on what you mean by "history on your computer". Here are some ways to delete some of the stuff your computer stores about what you do on it. If you use firefox as your web browser ctrl+shift+delete deletes any private data your browser is storing about what websites you visit. There is a similar ability with IE. You should also make sure that there is not any spy ware on your computer collecting information. Adaware from lavasoft should kill most of it. Finally files that you delete on your hard drive are not really gone. They are just marked as rewritable. So until they get written over witch is hard to tell special software can still read the files you delete from your computer. to wipe out theese 'invisible' files your can defragment your hard drive which should clear it or there is some software that will rewrite over your whole drive however to make sure everything is gone.