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web browsers

A Wisdom Archive on web browsers

web browsers

A selection of articles related to web browsers

More material related to Web Browsers can be found here:
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web browsers
Running, Running - Classification of running by distance, Running - Competitive running, Running - Jogging, Running - Running injuries, Running - Running speed, Running - Types of running events, Training Effect, Exercise hypertension, Stretching, The Side Stitch (cramp/pain under the ribs)

ARTICLES RELATED TO web browsers

web browsers: Encyclopedia - 1990s

The 1990s decade refers to the years from 1990 to 1999, inclusive, the last decade of the 20th Century. Informally, it can also include a few years at the end of the preceding decade or the beginning of the following decade. The 90s were marked with rapid progression of democracy, globalization and global capitalism following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. Key forces shaping the decade were the Gulf War; popularization of Personal Computers and the Internet, leading to the .com boom. ...

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Read more here: » 1990s: Encyclopedia - 1990s

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Bookmark

1) A bookmark is a thin marker, commonly made from paper or leather, used to keep one's place in a printed work and so be able to return to it with ease at some time in the future. 2) This term is being reused in various modern software applications, such as word processors, and most notably, the Internet. Bookmark - Bookmarks for books. As the first printed books were quite rare and valuable, it was determined early on that something was needed to mark one's place in a book without causing its pages ...

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Read more here: » Bookmark: Encyclopedia - Bookmark

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Blogger.com

Blogger is a service created by Pyra Labs that provides Web-based tools used by individuals to publish to the Web. Pyra Labs is now owned by Google. The tool Blogger is a service to make weblog publishing easier. The user does not have to write any code or to worry about installing server software or scripts. Nevertheless, the user can influence the design of his or her blog freely. Blogger allows for the hosting of the blogs on its own Blogspot or on the server of the blogger's choosing (via FTP or SFTP). While most web ...

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Read more here: » Blogger.com: Encyclopedia - Blogger.com

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Zine

A zine—an abbreviation of the word magazine—is most commonly a small circulation, non-commercial publication of original or appropriated texts and images. More broadly, the term encompasses any self-published work of minority interest. Zines are written in a variety of formats, from computer-printed text to comics to handwritten text (the most famous example perhaps the eponymous work of Aaron Cometbus). Topics covered are broad, including political, personal, social, or sexual content far enough outside of the mains ...

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Read more here: » Zine: Encyclopedia - Zine

web browsers: Encyclopedia - XML

The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a W3C-recommended general-purpose markup language for creating special-purpose markup languages, capable of describing many different kinds of data. It is a simplified subset of SGML. Its primary purpose is to facilitate the sharing of data across different systems, particularly systems connected via the Internet. Languages based on XML (for example, Geography Markup Language (GML), RDF/XML, RSS, MathML, Physical Markup Language (PML), XHTML, SVG, MusicXML and cXML) are defined in a forma ...

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Read more here: » XML: Encyclopedia - XML

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Question mark

apostrophe ( ' ) ( ’ ) brackets ( ( ) ) ( [ ] ) ( { } ) ( 〈 〉 ) colon ( : ) comma ( , ) dashes ( ‒ ) ( – ) ( — ) ( ― ) ellipsis ( … ) ( ... ) exclamation mark ( ! ) full stop/period ( . ) hyphen ( - ) ( ‐ ) interrobang ( Including:

Read more here: » Question mark: Encyclopedia - Question mark

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Web colors

Cascading Style Sheets Character encodings Layout engine comparison Dynamic HTML Font family HTML editor HTML element HTML scripting Unicode and HTML Web colors W3C XHTML Authors of web pages have a variety of options available for specifying colors for elements of web documents. Colors may be specified as an RGB triplet in hexadecimal format (a hex triplet); they may also be specified accor ...

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Read more here: » Web colors: Encyclopedia - Web colors

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Rune poem

The rune poems list the letters of a runic alphabet with a short verse characterizing each one. Three different rune poems have been preserved, an Icelandic, a Norwegian and an Anglo-Saxon one. The Icelandic and Norwegian poems both give the order of the sixteen runes of the Younger Futhark, ᚠ ᚢ ᚦ ᚬ ᚱ ᚴ ᚼ ᚾ ᛁ ᛅ ᛋ ᛏ ᛒ ᛘ ᛚ ᛦ, with slightly differing letter names, while the Anglo-Saxon poem has ᚠ ᚢ ᚦ ᚩ ᚱ ᚳ ᚷ ᚹ ᚻ ᚾ ᛁ ᛄ ᛇ ᛈ ᛉ ᛋ ᛏ ᛒ ᛖ ...

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Read more here: » Rune poem: Encyclopedia - Rune poem

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Korea

Korea refers to South Korea and North Korea together, which were a unified country until 1948. It is situated on the Korean Peninsula in East Asia, bordering China to the northwest and Russia to the northeast. It is populated by a homogeneous ethnic group, the Koreans, who speak a distinct language (Korean) and use the unique script Hangul. Korea was partitioned into two halves following World War II. South Korea is now a capitalist liberal democracy, and sometimes referred to simply as "Korea". North Korea remains a Communist state, of ...

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Read more here: » Korea: Encyclopedia - Korea

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Web portal

A web portal is a web site that provides a starting point or gateway to other resources on the Internet or an intranet. Intranet portals are also known as enterprise information portals (EIP). The building blocks of portals are portlets, which contain portions of content published using markup languages such as HTML and XML. Portals typically provide personalized capabilities to their users. They are designed to use distributed applications, different numbers and types of middleware, and hardware to provide servic ...

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Read more here: » Web portal: Encyclopedia - Web portal

web browsers: Encyclopedia - XHTML

Cascading Style Sheets Character encodings Layout engine comparison Dynamic HTML Font family HTML editor HTML element HTML scripting Unicode and HTML Web colors W3C XHTML The Extensible HyperText Markup Language, or XHTML, is a markup language that has the same expressive possibilities as HTML, but a stricter syntax. Whereas HTML is an application of SGML, a very flexible markup language, XHTML is an application of XML, a more restrictive ...

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Read more here: » XHTML: Encyclopedia - XHTML

web browsers: Encyclopedia - 2channel

2channel (2ちゃんねる, pronounced "ni-channeru", 2ch for short) is the largest Internet forum in the world.1 With over 10 million visitors every day (as of 2001), it is gaining significant influence in Japanese society, approaching that of traditional mass media such as TV, radio and magazines. 2channel - Overview. 2ch was opened in 1999 by Hiroyuki Nishimura, known simply as "Hiroyuki" (Including:

Read more here: » 2channel: Encyclopedia - 2channel

web browsers: Encyclopedia - GIF

GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) is a bitmap image format for pictures with up to 256 distinct colours. The format was introduced by CompuServe in 1987 and has since come into widespread usage on the World Wide Web. GIFs are compressed files, and were adopted to reduce the amount of time it takes to transfer images over a network connection. A GIF file employs lossless data compression so that the file size of an image may be reduced without degrading the visual quality, provided the image fits into 256 colours. (However, ther ...

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Read more here: » GIF: Encyclopedia - GIF

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Combo box

A combo box is a user interface control GUI element. It is a combination of a single-line textbox and a menu. It is also commonly referred to as a drop down box, drop down list, or listbox. When the combo box is inactive, it shows only its textbox aspect , which bears the current value of the control, and (usually) some mechanism to show the rest of the choices is also visible. In most implementations of combo boxes, it is not necessary to click a specific region (e.g. the arrow) to make the rest of the choices appear; clicking any ...

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Read more here: » Combo box: Encyclopedia - Combo box

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Computer Output to Laser Disk

COLD stands for Computer Output to Laser Disk. COLD systems are used to capture, archive, store, and retrieve data such as accounting reports, loan records, inventories, shipping and receiving documents, and customer bills. These systems are typically implemented to replace paper creation and microfiche solutions. COLD systems usually work by capturing data from print streams and storing it on hard drives, storage area networks, or optical disk drives. The data is then retrieved via web browsers or f ...

Read more here: » Computer Output to Laser Disk: Encyclopedia - Computer Output to Laser Disk

web browsers: Encyclopedia - User agent

A user agent is the client application used with a particular network protocol; the phrase is most commonly used in reference to those which access the World Wide Web. Web user agents range from web browsers to search engine crawlers ("spiders"), as well as screen readers and braille browsers used by people with disabilities. When Internet users visit a web site, a text string is generally sent to identify the user agent to the server. This forms part of the HTTP request, prefixed with User-agent: or User-Agent: a ...

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Read more here: » User agent: Encyclopedia - User agent

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Mouse computing

A mouse is a handheld pointing device for computers, being a small object fitted with one or more buttons and shaped to sit naturally under the hand. The underside of the mouse houses a device that detects the mouse's motion relative to the flat surface on which it moves. The mouse's 2D motion is typically translated into the motion of a pointer on the display. It is called a mouse primarily because the cord on early models resembled the rodent's tail, and also because the motion of the pointer on the screen can be mouse-like.< ...

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Read more here: » Mouse computing: Encyclopedia - Mouse computing

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Computer terminal

A computer terminal is an electronic or electromechanical hardware device used for entering data into, and displaying data from, a computer or a computing system. Computer terminal - Historical. Early user terminals connected to computers were generally electromechanical teleprinters (TTYs), such as the model 33 Teletype. However these were too slow for most production uses. By the early 1970s, many in the computer industry realized that an affordable video data entry terminal could supplant the then ubiqui ...

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Read more here: » Computer terminal: Encyclopedia - Computer terminal

web browsers: Encyclopedia - Web server

The term web server can mean one of two things: A computer that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests from clients, which are known as web browsers, and serving them web pages, which are usually HTML documents. A computer program that provides the functionality described in the first sense of the term. Web server - Common features. Although web server programs differ in detail, they all share some basic common features. Every web server program operates ...

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Read more here: » Web server: Encyclopedia - Web server

web browsers: Encyclopedia - University of California Berkeley

University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (also known as California, Cal, UCB, UC Berkeley, The University of California, or simply Berkeley) is a public coeducational university situated east of the San Francisco Bay in Berkeley, California, overlooking the Golden Gate. It is ...

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Read more here: » University of California Berkeley: Encyclopedia - University of California Berkeley

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