The web
WebHistory[edit]
World Wide Web (WWW) is an information room in which web pages and other web assets are identifiable by Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), linked by hyperlinks and available over the intranet. In 1989 the British scholar Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web. 2 ][3] The web page was published outside CERN in 1991, initially for other research institutes from January 1991 and for the general public on the web in August 1991.
World Wide Web has been crucial to the evolution of the information age and is the most important instrument with which millions of humans interacted on the web. Thereby he invented three main technologies: a system of worldwide unambiguous identification for web and other ressources, the universal-document identifier (UDI), later known as standardized ressource location (URL) and standardized ressource identification (URI); the publication lingua franca HyperText Markup Language (HTML); The World Wide Web had a number of different features to other available hyper-text-tools.
In contrast to previous versions such as HyperCard, the World Wide Web was not propriety, so it was possible to build server and client independent and extend without license limitations. CERN on 30 April 1993 announces that the World Wide Web will be free of charge for everyone. Scientists generally agreed that a turning point for the World Wide Web began with the introduction[26] of the mosaic web browser[27] in 1993, a graphic web browsers designed by a National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (NCSA-UIUC) under the direction of Marc Andreessen.
28 ] Before mosaic publishing, graphs were not often merged with text in web pages, and the Web's appeal was lower than that of older protocol used over the Web, such as Gopher and Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS). W3C was established by Tim Berners-Lee after he retired from the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in October 1994.
World Wide Web, acronym WWW and generally known as..... "I know the World Wide Web is the only thing that in its condensed version lasts three time as long to be said as what it stands for". 44 ] In Mandarin Chinese, the World Wide Web is generally interpreted via phonosemantic matched with ??? (???), which fills www and means verbatim "innumerable dimensions of the web,"[45][better resource needed] a transmission that mirrors the World Wide Web's conceptual designs and dissemination.
Time Berners-Lee's webspace states that the World Wide Web is formally written as three distinct words, each of which is capitalized with no dashes in between. HTTP protocols are critical to the World Wide Web, and the additional layers of cryptography in HTTPS are critical when web browser users are sending or retrieving sensitive information such as password or bank information.
Due to the fact that images are cached, mirrored and copied, it is hard to delete an existing picture from the World Wide Web. There are many official norms and other technological specification and softwares that regulate the functioning of various facets of the World Wide Web, the Internets and computer information-sharing. Much of the documentation is the work of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) led by Berners-Lee, but some is prepared by the International Telecommunications Federation (IETF) and other organizations.
Supplementary releases contain descriptions of other major World Wide Web technology, which include, but are not restricted to, the following: 76 ] On July 25, 2008, Google developers Jesse Alpert and Nissan Hajaj reported that Google Search had found a trillion dollars in uniquely crafted web-sites. Web Café is a computer that is a web site computer either hosted on the Web or in an organization that maintains recently viewed Web pages to enhance user responsiveness when the same contents are retrieved within a specified period of the initial demand.
2009. Archives from the originals on 9 July 2015. Returned on July 16, 2015. Hop up ^ McPherson, Stephanie Sammartino (2009). Berners-Lee: Inventor of the World Wide Web. Archives from the originals on April 15, 2016. Skip up ^ "World Wide Web Timeline". Archives from the Genuine on 29 July 2015.
Bounced back on August 1, 2015. Archives from the orginal from 9. September 2015. Bounced back on August 1, 2015. Archives from the originals, 2 July 2015. Bounced back on August 1, 2015. Archives from the orginal on 6 December 2017. Hop up ^ Enzer, Larry (August 31, 2018). "Development of the World Wide Web."
Returned on August 31, 2018. Skip to top ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archives from the orginal (PDF) from 17. November 2015. Brought back on August 26, 2015. Archives from the originals on 15 March 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the orginal on 2 May 2015. Returned on May 12, 2015. Skip up ^ "Tim Berners-Lee's World Wide Web Browser".
Archives from the originals on 17 July 2011. Archives from the orginal on 21 July 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the orginal on 31 January 2010. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the originals on 24 December 2015. Returned on December 23, 2015. Archives from the originals on 8 June 2013.
Skip up ^ "Short abstract of the Worldwide Web Project". August 6, 1991. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the originals on 4 August 2012. Returned on July 27, 2012. Archives from the orginal on 31 March 2010. Brought back on March 30, 2010. Hop up "The Early World Web at SLAC."
Archives from the orginal from 24 November 2005. Archives from the orginal on 12. February 2010. Brought back on March 30, 2010. Hop up "A Little Historic of the World Wide Web". Archives from the orginal on 6 May 2013. World Wide Web". Archives from the orginal on 8 June 2010.
Brought back on July 23, 2009. Skip to top ^ "Ten years of public domain for the orginal web software". April 30, 2003. Archives from the originals, 13 August 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. February 14, 1996. Archives from the orginal on 20 February 2009.
Brought back on July 27, 2009. July 15, 2009. Returned on November 25, 2008. Skip up ^ "WWW (World Wide Web) Definition". Archives from the orginal on 11 May 2009. Brought back on February 19, 2010. "World Wide Web Architectural Suite, Band One." Archives from the originals on 9 February 2015. Bounced back on February 11, 2015.
Archives (PDF) from the originals on 3 February 2016. Returned on February 7, 2016. Archives from the orginal from 23. December 2007. Returned on May 25, 2008. The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the originals on 22 April 2016. Returned on April 18, 2016. "It' a well-founded hypothesis about how to find on the World Wide Web."
Archives from the orginal on 20 October 2014. Skip up to: a to Hamilton, Naomi (31 July 2008). Archives from the orginal on 24 May 2009. Returned on May 12, 2009. Hop up ^ Buntin, Seth (September 23, 2008). Archives from the originals, 13 August 2009. Returned on August 22, 2009.
Archives from the orginal on August 2, 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Skip up ^ Palazzi, P2 (2011)'The Early Days of the WWW at CERN' Archives on July 23, 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Archives from the orginal from 27. June 2009. Brought back on 27 May 2009. Hop up ^ Masnick, Mike (July 7, 2008).
Archives from the orginal from 27. June 2009. Brought back on 27 May 2009. Archives from the originals on 25 May 2014. Returned on May 25, 2014. Archives from the originals on April 4, 2017. Skip up ^ Simonite, Tom (July 22, 2008). Archives from the originals, 13 March 2016. Returned on February 7, 2016.
Archive from the orginal from 12. November 2008. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the orginal on August 2, 2009. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Returned on February 7, 2016. Skip up to: a at Ben-Itzhak, Yuval (18 April 2008). "Info Security 2008 - New Defense Strategies in the Fight against E-Crime". Archives from the originals on 4 June 2008.
Brought back on April 20, 2008. Archives from the originals on 15 April 2013. Returned on June 7, 2008. in April of 2008: Archives (PDF) from the source 25 June 2008. Returned on May 11, 2008. Archives from the originals on 7 March 2008. Brought back on April 26, 2008. Skip up ^ "Security Threat Report (Q1 2008)" (PDF).
Archives (PDF) from the originals on April 15, 2013. Brought back on April 24, 2008. In July, 2008. Archives (PDF) from the originals on April 15, 2013. Returned on August 24, 2008. Archives from the source (PDF) of 25 June 2008. Returned on June 6, 2008. Archives from the originals on 15 April 2013. Released on June 4, 2008, and AJAX Web apps can bring new security flaws such as "client-side vulnerability checks, elevated target areas, and new cross-site scripting (XSS) capabilities" to Ritchie, Paul (March 2007).
Archives from the source (PDF) of 25 June 2008. Withdrawn on June 6, 2008, in which Hayre, Jaswinder S. & Kelath, Jayasankar (June 22, 2006) are named. Archives from the orginal on 15 May 2008. Returned on June 6, 2008. Archives from the originals on 18 April 2008. Returned on June 7, 2008.
February 20, 2013. Archives from the Genuine on December 21, 2014. Returned on December 21, 2014. Leap up ^ Prince, Brian (April 9, 2008). Brought back on April 25, 2008. Hop up ^ Preston, Rob (April 12, 2008). Archives from the originals on 14 April 2008. Brought back on April 25, 2008. Skip up ^ Claburn, Thomas (February 6, 2007).
Archives from the originals on 7 February 2009. Brought back on April 25, 2008. Hop up^ Duffy Marsan, Carolyn (April 9, 2008). networking world. Archives from the originals on 14 April 2008. Brought back on April 17, 2008. Skip to the ^ byd, thenah; Hargittai, Eszter (July 2010). Archives from the originals on 4 February 2011.
The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the orginal on April 2, 2009. Brought back on April 7, 2009. The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the orginal on 14. April 2009. Brought back on April 7, 2009. The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the orginal on April 5, 2009. Brought back on April 7, 2009. The World Wide Web Consortium.
Archives from the originals on 1 April 2009. Brought back on April 7, 2009. The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the originals on 16 April 2009. Brought back on April 10, 2009. Skip up ^ Davis, Mark (April 5, 2008). Archives from the orginal on 21 May 2009. Brought back on April 10, 2009. Leap up ^ "World Wide Web Consortium supporting IETF URI standards and IRI Proposal Standard" (press release).
The World Wide Web Consortium. Archives from the originals on 7 February 2009. Brought back on April 10, 2009. Archives from the originals on 24 February 2011. Returned on February 9, 2011. "Search the World Wide Web" (PDF). Archives from the originals on April 4, 2008. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the originals on 24 May 2013.
Brought back on July 27, 2009. Archives from the source (PDF), February 4, 2015. Bounced February 4, 2015. Skip to the top ^ "The World Wide Web Size". Archives from the originals on 24 May 2013. Brought back on July 27, 2009. Leap up ^ Alpert, Jesse; Hajaj, Nissan (25 July 2008). Archives from the originals on 24 May 2013.
Returned on May 17, 2009. "World Wide Web Architectural Suite, Band One." Berners-Lee, Tim (August 1996). "It'?s the World Wide Web: Fielding, R.; Gettys, J.; Mogul, J.; Frystyk, H.; Masinter, L.; Leach, P.; Berners-Lee, T. (June 1999). Ongoing Web Development (2010) 362 pages; historic view of the World Wide Web, covering questions of cultural, conservation and contents.
"I' m sorry, I' m sorry, I' m sorry. I' m sorry. World wide web technology architecture: "<font color="#ffff00">The World Wide Web and Health Information". Reduce W3C recommendations "World Wide Wait".