Difference between revisions of "World Wide Web"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (add link)
m (See also: +GeoCities)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''World Wide Web''' (often referred to as the '''WWW''' or '''Web''' for short) is an extremely large [[hypertext]] system which is the most-popular [[application]] on the [[Internet]] (to the point that to many ordinary people, the two are synonyms). It consists of a large number of [[server]]s, which provide the content, along with the [[client]] [[user]] applications, called '[[browser]]s', which retrieve and display the content, usually on a [[personal computer]] of some sort.
+
The '''World Wide Web''' (often referred to as the '''WWW''' or '''Web''' for short) is an extremely large [[hypertext]] system which is the most-popular [[application]] on the [[Internet]] (to the point that to many ordinary people, the two are synonyms).
 +
 
 +
It consists of a large number of [[server]]s, which provide the content, along with the [[client]] [[user]] applications, called '[[browser]]s', which retrieve the content, using the [[Hypertext Transfer Protocol‎|HTTP]] [[protocol]], and display it, usually on a [[personal computer]] of some sort.
  
 
The content is divided into 'static' content (which is stored in its final form, ready to be passed out to whoever asks for it), and 'dynamic', which is prepared in response to a user's request.
 
The content is divided into 'static' content (which is stored in its final form, ready to be passed out to whoever asks for it), and 'dynamic', which is prepared in response to a user's request.
  
{{stub}}
+
{{semi-stub}}
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
 
 +
* [[GeoCities]]
 +
 
 +
[[Category: Internet]]

Latest revision as of 21:57, 29 January 2024

The World Wide Web (often referred to as the WWW or Web for short) is an extremely large hypertext system which is the most-popular application on the Internet (to the point that to many ordinary people, the two are synonyms).

It consists of a large number of servers, which provide the content, along with the client user applications, called 'browsers', which retrieve the content, using the HTTP protocol, and display it, usually on a personal computer of some sort.

The content is divided into 'static' content (which is stored in its final form, ready to be passed out to whoever asks for it), and 'dynamic', which is prepared in response to a user's request.

See also