Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Spanish term or phrase:
transmisión ulterior
English translation:
your next visit
Added to glossary by
Kerry Taylor
Jul 11, 2015 17:48
8 yrs ago
2 viewers *
Spanish term
transmisión ulterior (de cookies)
Spanish to English
Tech/Engineering
Internet, e-Commerce
Hi everyone,
I'm struggling to translate "su transmisión ulterior" in the following sentence:
"Las cookies utilizadas en este sitio web tienen, en todo caso, carácter temporal con la única finalidad de hacer más eficaz su transmisión ulterior."
I've seen it translated as "their subsequent transmission" or "their onward transmission". From reading up on these temporary cookies "subsequent" seems more logical but I don't feel sure enough to call it and I don't even feel sure if we'd put it this way in English.
Thank you so much for your help!
I'm struggling to translate "su transmisión ulterior" in the following sentence:
"Las cookies utilizadas en este sitio web tienen, en todo caso, carácter temporal con la única finalidad de hacer más eficaz su transmisión ulterior."
I've seen it translated as "their subsequent transmission" or "their onward transmission". From reading up on these temporary cookies "subsequent" seems more logical but I don't feel sure enough to call it and I don't even feel sure if we'd put it this way in English.
Thank you so much for your help!
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +3 | your next visit | philgoddard |
5 | your subsequent accesses | Billh |
4 | subsequent/next delivery | Jennifer Levey |
3 | eventual transmittal | Frank Gerace |
Proposed translations
+3
2 hrs
Spanish term (edited):
transmisión ulterior
Selected
your next visit
I agree with Robin's explanation, and "su" does indeed refer to the website, not the cookies. But I don't feel "its next delivery" conveys a very clear meaning. "Your next visit" is very commonly used.
Example sentence:
Each cookie is unique to your web browser. It will contain some anonymous information such as a unique identifier... that can make your next visit easier and the site more useful to you.
the cookies store your information, both for ease of use on your next visit, and for ad tracking.
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thank you!"
37 mins
eventual transmittal
better than transmission which makes me think of RF
57 mins
subsequent/next delivery
'transmisión ulterior' refers to the delivery/display of the website, not the 'transmisión' of the cookies themselves. The idea is that if the site places cookies on the visitor's computer 'now', the page will be displayed more 'efficiently' (whatever that might mean...) the 'next time' the visitor comes to the site (tomorrow, next week, ...).
A simple example: a multilingual site might set a cookie to 'remember' the visitor's preferred language; if the visitor choses, say, French, then next time (s)he visits the site it will look at the cookie, see it's set to French, and display French without bothering to ask the visitor.
A simple example: a multilingual site might set a cookie to 'remember' the visitor's preferred language; if the visitor choses, say, French, then next time (s)he visits the site it will look at the cookie, see it's set to French, and display French without bothering to ask the visitor.
13 hrs
your subsequent accesses
This is referring to a session cookie. If it stays after you close the browser it is not a temporary cookie. In any event this answer leaves the question open but you cannot assume it will apply to subsequent site visits.
http://www.lycamobile.co.uk/en/cookie-policy
This is a session cookie used to preserve data across subsequent accesses. It is a temporary cookie that remains in the cookie file of your browser until you close the browser. It is mainly used to maintain your identity.
This is a temporary cookie that remains in the cookie file of your browser until you close the browser. It is used to maintain the top most navigation tabs.
http://www.allaboutcookies.org/cookies/cookies-the-same.html
Are all cookies the same?
There are two different types of cookies:
Session cookies - these are temporary and are erased when you close your browser at the end of your surfing session. The next time you visit that particular site it will not recognise you and will treat you as a completely new visitor as there is nothing in your browser to let the site know that you have visited before (more on session cookies).
Persistent cookies - these remain on your hard drive until you erase them or they expire. How long a cookie remains on your browser depends on how long the visited website has programmed the cookie to last (more on persistent cookies).
http://www.trafficpenaltytribunal.gov.uk/info/20007/about_th...
When you access our website or login to our secure area we send you an encrypted session cookie. A session cookie is a temporary cookie that only remains in the cookie file of your browser until you leave the site. This cookie is used to validate your access to different parts of the site.
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Note added at 13 hrs (2015-07-12 07:44:32 GMT)
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you can leave out the "your". its subsequent transmissions has the same meaning as your subsequent accesses.....
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Note added at 14 hrs (2015-07-12 07:55:14 GMT)
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"Las cookies utilizadas en este sitio web tienen, en todo caso, carácter temporal con la única finalidad de hacer más eficaz su transmisión ulterior."
The cookies used on this site are in all cases temporary, with the sole purpose of making your subsequent accesses more effective.
http://www.lycamobile.co.uk/en/cookie-policy
This is a session cookie used to preserve data across subsequent accesses. It is a temporary cookie that remains in the cookie file of your browser until you close the browser. It is mainly used to maintain your identity.
This is a temporary cookie that remains in the cookie file of your browser until you close the browser. It is used to maintain the top most navigation tabs.
http://www.allaboutcookies.org/cookies/cookies-the-same.html
Are all cookies the same?
There are two different types of cookies:
Session cookies - these are temporary and are erased when you close your browser at the end of your surfing session. The next time you visit that particular site it will not recognise you and will treat you as a completely new visitor as there is nothing in your browser to let the site know that you have visited before (more on session cookies).
Persistent cookies - these remain on your hard drive until you erase them or they expire. How long a cookie remains on your browser depends on how long the visited website has programmed the cookie to last (more on persistent cookies).
http://www.trafficpenaltytribunal.gov.uk/info/20007/about_th...
When you access our website or login to our secure area we send you an encrypted session cookie. A session cookie is a temporary cookie that only remains in the cookie file of your browser until you leave the site. This cookie is used to validate your access to different parts of the site.
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Note added at 13 hrs (2015-07-12 07:44:32 GMT)
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you can leave out the "your". its subsequent transmissions has the same meaning as your subsequent accesses.....
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Note added at 14 hrs (2015-07-12 07:55:14 GMT)
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"Las cookies utilizadas en este sitio web tienen, en todo caso, carácter temporal con la única finalidad de hacer más eficaz su transmisión ulterior."
The cookies used on this site are in all cases temporary, with the sole purpose of making your subsequent accesses more effective.
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