Super Information Highway
There is no denying the fact
that in modern world, the World Wide Web is the symbol of Super Information Highway which may be
one’s preferred source of information which is unavoidable to correspond with
outside world in the field of business, communication, economics, information
and electronic world. The reason of being enthusiastic is to be motivated with
others out side environment. Not too
many years ago, we are boost of the set of files that we preserve with vendor
product documentation. We conscientiously send for information on magazine
reader service cards for products that we might need to incorporate into one of
our projects. Our goal is to be able to pull out the product literature when we
had to prepare that quick turn-around proposal and then simply confirm pricing.
This system does work, but it becomes a burden to maintain where we have to
spend a lot of time in filing the information that we receive.
The most important parts of
the World Wide Web are the elements, such as servers, pages, hot links, and
more--all of which comprise the bulk of the World Wide Web. The following are
some related terms we may see: Web site: A collection of World Wide Web documents, usually
consisting of a home page and several related pages. We might think of a Web
site as an interactive electronic in such critical phenomena. Home page: Frequently, the
"cover" of a particular Web site. The home page is the main, or
first, page displayed for an organization's or person's World Wide Web site. Link: Short for "hypertext link." A link provides a
path that connects us from one part of a World Wide Web document
to another part of the same document, a different document, or another
resource. A link usually appears as a uniquely decorated word that we can click
to be transported to another Web page.
Anchor: A link that takes us to a different part of the same Web page. Image map: A feature available on the
World Wide Web that enables us to click various locations in an graphic
image to link to different documents. Frame:
A feature available on the World Wide Web that presents text, links, graphics,
and other media in separate portions of the browser display. Some sections
remain unchanging, whereas others serve as an exhibit of linked documents. Table: A feature available on the World
Wide Web that presents document text, links, graphics, and other media in row
and column format. Table borders may be visible in some documents but invisible
in others.
Furthermore, it seems as if we
have to work hard to keep refreshing the literature, especially in light of the
rapid change in products and pricing that goes on in the computer industry. On
many World Wide Web sites, including CERN's home page, we can find more extensive details and a more
complete listing of actual events than the brief history of the World Wide Web provided even in case of
E-Commerce.
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