Sometimes chlamydia surface antigens change, and make it hard for the immune system to keep up. It also appears that chlamydia may release toxins that damage the immune response in some cases. (see related link).
Chlamydia does affect your immune system, and your immune system fights chlamydia. However, unlike HIV, chlamydia does not attack the immune system cells directly.
Chlamydia trachomatis has only the human host.
the capsule (outer covering of the bacteria)
Because their immune system's are not good.
/etc/hosts Only root can change it, users can view it
Mutations may result in a beneficial change. For example: An organism like a virus or bacteria relies on avoiding the immune cells of the body to be able to survive and live in a hosts body. If they mutate, then antibodies may not recognise them - allowing the organisms to avoid destruction by the immune system of the body for a short time, before new antibodies are produced by new plasma cells.
If you delete the hosts file then you would get too many pop up's and your system would take longer time to display the webpages .
root partition
It's called DNS
No, HIV remains hidden in the hosts DNA as a provirus and doesn't start destroying immune cells for many years after the initial infection.
Where is the HOSTS file located : Windows 95/98/Me c:\windows\hostsWindows NT/2000/XP Proc:\winnt\system32\drivers\etc\hostsWindows XP Home c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts(you may need administrator access for Windows NT/2000/XP)What is the Host File?It's a list of computers/hosts and there IP address. You put in it hosts that you regularly visit to speed up access to those hosts by avoiding having to look up the IP address from the host name.
hosted is called origanizado hosts is called hosts
Operating System Zoo is a website that hosts disk images of free an open-source operating systems for use in virtual machines and emulators.