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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X
Y Z
*Certain terms in this glossary have been
derived from Webopedia and Netlingo.
- A
- A (Address) Record
- Address records assign a hostname (e.g.:
support.yourdomain.com) to a specific IP address (e.g.: 123.123.123.123).
- Access
- Refers to the database program "Microsoft
Access", also called Jet Database.
- ADSL- Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line
- A technology that allows more data to be sent
over existing copper telephone lines (POTS). ADSL supports data rates of
from 1.5 to 9 Mbps when receiving data (known as the downstream rate) and
from 16 to 640 Kbps when sending data (known as the upstream rate). ADSL
requires a special ADSL modem.
- Alias
- An alias is an e-mail address that forwards
its mail to a specified mailbox, masking the true name of the mailbox in
which the mail is actually received. For example, Sales@Domain.com could be
an alias for Johndoe@aol.com.
- Analog
- This word is often used to denote the opposite
of digital. Loosely, it means the measuring of data on more physical
grounds, as opposed to the more electronic or "wired" state of
digital.
- Anonymous
- The means that allow a person to connect to an
FTP site, search through available files, and download any file, document or
program without having to establish a userID and/or password on the system
where the material resides.
See Also: Anonymous FTP
- Anonymous FTP
- An Internet File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
option that allows you to let others onto your Web site to download files
that you have made available, without first establishing an account. Most
FTP servers are set up to allow a limited amount of anonymous FTP users to
log in at the same time, and only provide access to designated files.
- Apache
- A popular Web server. By some estimates, it is
used to host more than 50% of all Web sites in the world. The original
version of Apache was written for UNIX, but there are now versions that run
under OS/2, Windows and other platforms.
- Applet
- A mini-program that can be downloaded quickly
and used by any computer equipped with a Java- or ActiveX-capable browser.
Applets carry their own software players.
- ARPANET - Advanced Projects Agency
Network
- The precursor to the Internet. Developed in
the late 60's and early 70's by the U.S. Department of Defense as an
experiment in wide-area-networking that would survive a nuclear war.
- ASP - Active Server Pages (Windows
2000/NT Only)
- A specification for a dynamically created Web
page with an .ASP extension that contain either Visual Basic or JScript
code. When a browser requests an ASP page, the Web server generates a page
with HTML code and sends it back to the browser. ASP pages are similar to
CGI scripts, but they enable Visual Basic programmers to work with familiar
tools. ASP is only available on NT servers.
- Autoresponder
- An e-mail that is automatically sent in reply
to any e-mail received in a specified mailbox. Also known as a vacation
message.
B
- Backbone
- The Internet's high-speed data highway that
serves as a major access point to which other networks can connect.
- Bandwidth
- 1. The range of frequencies a transmission
line or channel can carry; the higher the frequency the higher the bandwidth
and the greater the information-carrying capacity of a channel. For a
digital channel this is defined in bits per second or BPS. For an analog
channel it is dependent on the type and method of modulation used to encode
the data.
2. Expressed in cycles per second (hertz), the amount of information that
can flow through a channel. On the less technical side bandwidth is used to
measure the amount of time it takes for a Web page to fully load. Internet
users occasionally refer to larger graphics on Web pages as "bandwidth
hogs" - the use of the term bandwidth in this case isn't quite
accurate, but what it means is that the graphic is loading slowly due to its
large file size.
- Banner Ad Rotator
- Displays alternating banner ads and includes
an administration area with the ability to add, edit and delete banners from
the rotation list.
- BBS - Bulletin Board System
- An electronic message center. The Bulletin
Board System (BBS) allows you to dial in with a modem, review messages left
by others, and leave your own message if you want. Bulletin boards are a
particularly good place to find free or inexpensive software products. Most
bulletin boards serve specific interest groups.
- Binary
- Any downloadable file that doesn't simply
contain human-readable, ASCII text. Typically it refers to a runnable
program available for downloading, but it can also refer to pictures, sounds
or movies, among others. Most Usenet newsgroups have subgroups specifically
for binaries; a posting in comp.sys.mac.comm might announce that a program
is available for downloading, but the binary (the file itself) would be
found in comp.sys.mac.comm.binaries. Newsgroups such as
alt.pictures.binaries contain files for download which are actually
pictures. You will need a newsreader to download and decode these files.
- Bit
- The smallest unit of computerized data,
represented by a single-digit number in base-2--in other words, either a 1
or a zero. Bandwidth is usually measured in bits-per-second.
- BPS - Bits-Per-Second
- A measurement of the speed at which data is
moved from one place to another
- Browser
- A program used to view, download, upload, surf
or otherwise access documents (pages) on the World Wide Web. Browsers can be
text-based, meaning they do not show graphics or images, but most are text-
and graphical-based.
Browsers read "marked up" or coded pages (usually HTML but not
always) that reside on servers and interpret the coding into what we see
"rendered" as a Web page. Netscape Navigator and Microsoft
Internet Explorer are examples of Web browsers. The program you are using
right now to view this information is called a browser.
- Browser Compatibility
- A term that compares the way a Web page looks
on one WWW browser as opposed to another. Usually this is done with
Microsoft Internet Explorer (MIE) and Netscape Navigator, but can also refer
to cross-platform compatibility. (For example, the way a page renders or
displays on a Windows system as opposed to a Mac.) The reason these
incompatibilities exist is due to the way a browser interprets the Web
page's code (HTML). The differences are usually very slight, but they're
enough to annoy some Web designers and sometimes even their clients to the
point in which great time and energy is spent in making a Web site
compatible with any browser on any type of system. Browser compatibility is
also used in conjunction with (and should not be confused with) the term
browser support.
See Also: Browser Support
- Browser Support
- This refers to the ability of a particular
browser to even recognize and interpret certain HTML or other Web page
codes. For example, Netscape Navigator 1.0 did not have the ability to
render a page layout in frames. This feature did not come along until
version 2.0, therefore it can be said that Navigator 1.0 did not
"support" frames.
See Also: Browser Compatibility
- Byte
- A set of Bits that represent a single
character. Usually there are 8 Bits in a Byte.
C
- Cable Modem
- A modem attached to a coaxial cable television
system. Cable modems can transmit data at 500 kilobytes a second, much
faster than a typical computer modem that sends signals over telephone
lines.
- CGI-BIN
- A directory on a server that
"houses" all of the CGI programs. When you see this as a directory
in your browser's URL window, it usually means you are either running or
about to run a CGI program. The "binary" part refers to when many
of the files placed in that directory were binary files. More recently, many
of these files are text-based.
See Also: Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
- Client
- A software program used to contact and obtain
data from a server software program on another computer, often across a
great distance.
- CNAME - Canonical Name
- The Canonical Name resource record, CNAME,
specifies an alias or nickname for the official, or canonical, host name.
Alias records assign an alternate hostname to a specific hostname. Both
hostnames point at whatever IP address the primary hostname is assigned to.
- Co-Location
- Most often used to refer to having a server
that belongs to one person or group physically located on an
Internet-connected network that belongs to another person or group.
- ColdFusion
- A Rapid Application Development (RAD) system
created by the Allaire Corporation of Cambridge, Mass, ColdFusion integrates
browser, server and database technologies into Web applications. Cold Fusion
Web pages include tags written in ColdFusion Markup Language (CFML) that
simplify integration with databases and avoid the use of more complex
languages like C++ to create translating programs. ColdFusion is the
industry's leading cross-platform Web application server. With ColdFusion,
Web developers can quickly develop and deliver a new generation of
large-volume, transaction-intensive Web applications for everything from
e-commerce to business automation and more.
- Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
- CGI is a set of rules that describe how a web
server communicates with another piece of software on the same machine, and
how the other piece of software (the CGI program) communicates with the web
server. Many scripting languages, such as Perl, follow the CGI standard.
This allows you to develop more interactive sites, by making use of system
features.
See Also: CGI-BIN
- Configuration
- A general-purpose computer term that refers to
the way your computer's operating system is set up. It can also refer to the
total combination of hardware components - central processing unit (CPU),
video display device, keyboard and peripheral devices - that make up the
computer system. The configuration is also at work in the software settings
that allow various hardware components of a computer system to communicate
with one another. A "vanilla" configuration is the standard
"clean" and "no frills" version of a computer's
configuration (no device drivers or extra settings). This is what a
technician might set a system to when trying to troubleshoot a problem with
a computer's hardware.
- Connectivity
- The state of being connected to the Internet
or some other type of computer network. On the Internet, if you lose your
connectivity, you are no longer online and must redial into your ISP. When
ISPs get many users signing on all at once, the connectivity tends to be
poor. "What is your connectivity?" usually means what kind of
speed does your Internet connection support, like 28.8 or T-1.
- Cookie
- A piece of information about your computer,
something you clicked on, and/or you (such as your username) that is stored
in a text file on your hard drive. A server accesses this information when
you connect to a Web site that wants to know this information. One common
occurrence of a "handing out a cookie", would be when you as a
user, log into a system through a Web site. After you enter in your username
and password, your browser saves a text file that it calls upon for later
access. This prevents you from having to log in again if you happen to leave
the Web site and then return at a later time. Cookies are also used in the
process of purchasing items on the Web. It is because of the cookie that
"shopping cart" technology works. By saving in a text file the
name, and other important information about an item a user
"clicks" on as they move through a shopping Web site, a user can
later go to an order form, and see all the items they selected, ready for
quick and easy processing.
- Credit card processing
- Online credit card processing is available
through many providers, such as Verisign Payment Services or Cardservice
International. For help write into Sales@gambino.com
- Cron
- A Unix command for scheduling jobs to be
executed sometime in the future. A cron is normally used to schedule a job
that is executed periodically - for example, to send out a notice every
morning. It is also a daemon process, meaning that it runs continuously,
waiting for specific events to occur.
- CyberCash
- A form of real-time credit card processing
D
- Dedicated Line
- A telecommunications line that lets your
computer have a direct, permanent connection to the Internet
- Dial-Up Account
- A basic type of Internet account that allows
you to dial up an Internet Service Provider's (ISP) computer with a modem.
These types of accounts usually have a UNIX or other command-line interface.
- Digest
- A manner in which messages to a list server
mailing list can be automatically consolidated into one e-mail (the digest)
and sent to the list subscribers periodically.
- DLL - Dynamic Link Library
- A Windows platform file that is actually an
executable mini-program itself that is NOT executed directly by a user but
by a running program or application
- DNS - Domain Name System
- A database system that translates an IP
address into a domain name. For example, a numeric IP address like
207.219.116.4 is converted into netlingo.com. The DNS is a static,
hierarchical name service that uses TCP/IP hosts and is housed on a number
of servers on the Internet. Basically, it maintains this database for
figuring out and finding (or resolving) host names and IP addresses. This
allows users to specify remote computers by host names rather than numerical
IP addresses. Also referred to as Domain Name Service and Domain Name
Server.
- Domain Name or Domain
- The unique name identifying a Web site,
located at the right of the @ sign in an Internet address. Domain names
always have two or more parts, separated by dots, as in www.yourdomain.com.
Domains are tied to name servers, which direct to which IP address the
domain should point. Any server can have multiple domain names, but a domain
name can only point to one server.
- Domain Registration
- Our partnership with InterNIC allows us to
register or transfer your domain with them seamlessly. Therefore, we charge
no additional fee for InterNIC registration or transfers. However, be aware
that you are still responsible for the cost of domain registration with
InterNIC, which currently is $70 for two year, $150 for five year, and $250
for 10 year registrations.
See Also: Domain, InterNIC
- DRAM - Dynamic Random-Access Memory
- A memory chip contained on such devices as
video and sound cards. DRAM is "dynamic" because the chip contains
an electrical charge (as opposed to SRAM, see below). The electrical charge
will die out eventually so it must refresh its memory regularly, which it
does automatically from your CPU. The only reason you need to know about
DRAM is because it is related to access time and video cards, etc.
- DSN - Data Source Name
- Data source names are used to access a
database. Customers can create DSN's via their administration page.
- Dynamic Content
- Information on a Web site or Web page that
changes often, usually daily and/or each time a user reloads or returns to
the page. Content that is also structured based on user input. For example,
when you search on some keywords on a search engine, the resulting page you
get is a "dynamic" page, meaning the information was created based
on the words you typed into the form on the previous page.
Dynamic Web sites are usually driven by Web application environments such as
Microsoft ASP or Allaire's ColdFusion, and the content is taken from a
database each time a page request is made.
- Dynamic SQL
- Creates queries based on user data,
environment variables, and previously returned query results. Dynamic SQL
can also increase processing efficiency by executing multiple queries and
sending them to multiple databases from a single browser request.
E
- E-Commerce - Electronic Commerce
- Quite simply, it means conducting business
online. In the traditional sense of selling goods, it is possible to do this
electronically because of certain software programs that run the main
functions of an e-commerce Web site, such as product display, online
ordering, and inventory management. The software, which works in conjunction
with online payment systems to process payments, resides on a commerce
server.
The definition of e-commerce has expanded to include all kinds of commercial
online transactions, like selling products via credit cards, charging for
advertising on a high-traffic Web site, or trading stock in your brokerage
account -- practically any way a company can derive revenue online is
thought of as e-commerce.
- E-mail - Electronic Mail
- E-mail is the sending and receiving of
messages, usually text, from one computer to another using e-mail software.
See Also: POP3, SMTP
- Ecash
- Developed by DigiCash and the Mark Twain Bank,
ecash is the ability to use real money in an electronic purchasing system
over the World Wide Web. The process involves you sending a check to Mark
Twain Bank which in turn sends you software that gives you access to the
ecash Mint where you draw funds to your hard drive for use when purchasing
goods and services on the Internet.
- Encryption
- A way of making data unreadable to everyone
except the receiver, encryption is an increasingly common way of sending
credit card numbers over the Internet when conducting commercial
transactions.
See Also: PGP - Pretty Good Privacy
- Ethernet
- A widespread networking scheme rated at 10 Mbs
(megabits per second).
- Extensions
- The characters after the dot in a file's name
are considered its extension. This is used to determine how the file is
formatted and viewed. For example a file named netlingo.html means that the
file is coded in HTML and therefore must be viewed with a compatible program
such as a Web browser in order to see it properly. On the Internet you will
come across many different file extensions such as .dcr, .mov, .avi and .au.
In order to properly handle these files your browser must be configured to
recognize these extensions.
F
- FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
- Documents that list and answer the most common
questions on a particular subject
- FastCGI
- An open extension to CGI that provides higher
performance by reusing processes to handle multiple requests.
- File Extension
- The group of letters after a period or
"dot" in a file name is called the file extension. This extension
refers to the type of file it is, for example, if the filename is readme.txt,
the extension txt denotes this is a text file and can be viewed using a text
editor such as Notepad or Simple Text. Operating systems such as MAC OS or
Windows 95 will refer to a file's extension when choosing which application
to launch when a user clicks on a particular file name.
- Firewall
- A device that protects a private network from
the public part, or a computer set up to monitor traffic between an Internet
site and the Internet. A firewall is designed to increase a server's
security by keeping unauthorized outsiders from tampering with a computer
system.
- FrontPage Compatibility
- Allows you to edit your site using Microsoft
FrontPage or Visual InterDev. Also allows you to make use of special built-
in features that use FrontPage Extensions.
See Also: FrontPage Extensions
- FrontPage Extensions
- Server add-ons that allows you to make use of
pre-defined functions such as a hit counter, Java buttons and form
validation.
See Also: FrontPage Capatibility
- FTP - File Transfer Protocol
- Common procedure used for downloading and
uploading files over the Internet. With FTP you can log in to another
Internet site and transfer (send or receive) files. Some sites have public
file archives that you can access by using FTP with the account name
"anonymous" and your e-mail address as the password. This type of
access is called anonymous FTP. Macintosh users use a program called Fetch;
one of the FTP programs for Windows is called WS-FTP.
G
- Gateway
- A computer system for exchanging information
across incompatible networks that use different protocols. For example, many
commercial services have e-mail gateways for sending messages to Internet
addresses.
- GIF - Graphic Interchange Format
- A common format for image files, especially
suitable for images containing large areas of the same color.
- Gigabyte
- 1000 or 1024 Megabytes
- Guest Book
- A simple guest book allows visitors to leave
their name and a brief message from/on your site.
- GUI - Graphical User Interface (goo-ey)
- This term refers to a software front-end
application meant to provide an attractive and easy-to-use interface between
a computer user and an application.
H
- HDML- Hand-Held Device Markup Language
- The HTML for hand-held devices like Palm
Pilots and PDAs.
A simple language used to define hypertext-like content and applications for
hand-held devices with small displays. HDML is designed to leverage the
infrastructure and protocols of the World Wide Web while providing an
efficient markup language for wireless and other handheld devices. Congruent
with the capabilities and limitations of many handheld devices, HDML's focus
goes beyond presentation and layout. HDML provides an explicit navigation
model, which does not rely upon the visual context, required of HTML. As
such, HDML offers an efficient means of providing content via the WWW
infrastructure to handheld devices such as cellular phones, pagers, and
wireless PDA's.
- Hit
- 1. A term used to describe the accessing of a
World Wide Web page. When a user "points" a browser to a Web site
URL, the moment that user requests the HTML document is called a
"hit". Hits are used to determine how popular a Web site is and
plays an important role in assessing how much it costs to advertise on a
particular Web page. Some Web site authors and developers use counters on
their page to let people know how many other users (hits) have accessed that
particular page that they are on.
There has been great debate as to the validity of the "number of
hits" pages or sites are said to receive due in part to Web servers
that record hits not only on accesses to HTML pages but also the graphics,
which are embedded in them.
2. Prior to 1994, the access of a Web file by a user on a server. Every
element of a requested page (graphics, multimedia, etc.), including the HTML
file itself, is counted as a hit. For example, if a Web page contains five
graphics, then accessing the page generates six hits. Hits used to be a
method of determining the amount of traffic a Web site received, but because
businesses needed to isolate the exact number of times a page was requested
in order to charge for advertising, this method was tossed aside in lieu
counting the actual HTML page requests.
- Host
- Any computer that can function as the
beginning and end point of data transfers. An Internet host has a unique
Internet address (IP address) and a unique domain or host name.
- Hotlist
- A list of frequently accessed World Wide Web
sites. Usually the names of the sites are coded as hypertext, making them
links. In this case the user must simply click on the name of the site in
order to go there. (Yahoo! started as one major hotlist.)
- Hotmail
- Hotmail is a Web-based free e-mail system
which adheres to the universal HTTP standard. It is based on the premise
that e-mail access should be easy and possible from any computer connected
to the World Wide Web. Web-based e-mail programs use a Web browser as an
e-mail program, providing a globally retrievable form of e-mail.
- HTML - Hypertext Markup Language
- HTML is the lingua franca for publishing
hypertext on the World Wide Web. It is a non-proprietary format based upon
SGML, and can be created and processed in a wide range of tools from simple
plain text editors to sophisticated WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get)
authoring tools. HTML uses tags like <h1> and </h1> to structure
text into headings, paragraphs, lists, hypertext links and more.
- HTTP - Hypertext Transfer Protocol
- The protocol that tells the server what to
send to the client, so the client can view Web pages, FTP sites, or other
areas of the net.
- HTTPS - Hypertext Transfer Protocol
Secure
- A type of server software that provides the
ability for secure transactions to take place on the World Wide Web. If a
Web site is running on a HTTPS server you can type in HTTPS instead of HTTP
in the URL section of your browser to enter into the "secured
mode". Windows NT HTTPS and Netscape Commerce server software support
this protocol.
- Hyperlink
- Web site text that can be clicked on with a
mouse, that in turn will take you to another Web page or a different area of
the same Web page. Hyperlinks are created (coded) in HTML. They are also
used to load multimedia files such as AVI movies and AU sound files.
- Hypertext
- A system of writing and displaying text that
enables the text to be linked in multiple ways, to be available at several
levels of detail, and to contain links to related documents. The term was
coined by Ted Nelson to refer to a nonlinear system of information browsing
and retrieval that contains associative links to other related documents.
The World Wide Web uses hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) to provide links
to pages and multimedia files.
I
- IIS - Internet Information Server
- Microsoft's Web server that runs on Windows NT
platforms. IIS comes bundled with Windows NT 4.0; Because IIS is tightly
integrated with the operating system, it is relatively easy to administer.
Currently IIS is available only for the Windows NT platform, whereas
Netscape's Web servers run on all major platforms, including Windows NT,
OS/2 and UNIX.
- Internet Backbone
- This fast network spanning the world from one
major metropolitan area to another is provided by a handful of national
Internet service providers (ISPs). These companies and organizations use
connections running at approximately 45 MB per second (T3 lines) linked up
at specified interconnection points called national access points. Local
ISPs connect to this backbone through routers so that data can be carried
though the backbone to its destination.
- Internet Protocol (IP) Address or IP
Number
- Sometimes called a dotted quad, the IP address
is a unique number used to identify a machine on the Internet. The number
consists of four numbers between 0 and 255 separated by dots
(208.233.88.55). Every machine on the Internet must have it's own IP
address. Domains are tied to name servers, which direct to which IP address
the domain should point.
See Also: Domain, Protocol
- Internet Security
- Information traveling on the Internet usually
takes a circuitous route through several intermediary computers to reach any
destination computer. The actual route your information takes to reach its
destination is not under your control. As your information travels on
Internet computers, any intermediary computer has the potential to eavesdrop
and make copies. An intermediary computer could even deceive you and
exchange information with you by misrepresenting itself as your intended
destination. These possibilities make the transfer of confidential
information such as passwords or credit card numbers susceptible to abuse.
This is where Internet security comes in and why it has become a rapidly
growing concern for all who use the Internet.
See also: SSL - Secure Sockets Layer
- InterNIC - Internet Network Information
Center
- A repository of information about the
Internet. It is divided into two parts: directory services, which is run by
AT&T in New Jersey, and registration services, which is run by Network
Solutions in Virginia. It is funded partially by the National Science
Foundation and partially by fees that are charged to register Internet
domains. This is the place where you register URLs or Domain Names like
www.netlingo.com and it basically involves a fee and several forms (some
very technical), to set up.
See Also: Domain Registration
- Intranet
- A private network inside a company or
organization that uses the same kinds of software that you would find on the
public Internet, but that is only for internal use. As the Internet has
become more popular, many of the tools used on the Internet are being used
in private networks, often in the form of Web servers that are available
only to employees. Note that an "Intranet" may not actually be an
Internet; it may simply be a network.
- ISDN - Integrated Services Digital
Network
- ISDN is a set of communications standards
allowing a single wire or optical fiber to carry voice, digital network
services and video. ISDN is intended to eventually replace the plain old
telephone system (POTS). ISDN was first published as one of the 1984 ITU-T
Red Book recommendations; the 1988 Blue Book recommendations added many new
features. ISDN uses mostly existing Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
switches and wiring, upgraded so that the basic "call" is a 64
kilobits per second, all-digital end-to-end channel. Packet and frame modes
are also provided in some places.
J
- Java
- Developed by Sun Microsystems, Java is a
programming language specifically designed for writing programs that can be
safely downloaded to your computer through the Internet and immediately run
without fear of viruses or other harm to your computer or files. Using small
Java programs (called "Applets"), Web pages can include functions
such as animations, calculators, and other fancy tricks. Java is a simple,
robust, object-oriented, platform-independent multi-threaded, dynamic
general-purpose programming environment. It is best for creating applets and
applications for the Internet, intranets and any other complex, distributed
network.
- Jet Data Engine
- Short for joint engine technology, the
database engine used by Microsoft Office and Visual Basic
K
- Key Words/Key Phrases
- Words or sets of words used to improve ranking
in search engines when those words are phrases are entered by a user. For
example, if a person does a search for "pet supplies", while a
person who has the key word "pet" in his page, the page with the
key phrase "pet supplies" will be ranked higher in the search
results.
L
- LAN - Local Area Network
- A network that connects computers in a small,
pre-determined area (like a room, building or set of buildings). LANs can
also be connected to each other via telephone lines and radio waves.
Workstations and personal computers in an office are commonly connected to
each other with a LAN. This allows them to have send/receive files and/or
have access to the files and data. Each computer connected to a LAN is
called a node.
- Leased Line
- Refers to a phone line (connection) that is
rented for exclusive 24-hour/7-days-a-week use from one computer or network
to another, or for constant access to the Internet. Also called a dedicated
line.
- Link
- Text and/or an image area on a Web page that a
user can click on to connect to or reference another document. Commonly,
links connect two Web pages or Web sites. They can also reference a
different part of the same document, linking to a file which will download
to your computer or triggering the launching of an external or helper
application which will then process the clicked-on file.
- List Server - Adding Headers
- Capability of adding header or trailer text to
all messages listed.
The list owner can choose to display text information (entered in the
Edit box) at the beginning or end of every message sent to the list. To
enter the header information, the list owner selects the Enable Header
option, clicks Edit, and then enters the text information. This information
is entered in the header.txt file. To enter the trailer info, the list owner
selects the Enable Trailer option, clicks Edit, and then enters the text
information. This.information is entered in the trailer.txt file.
For example, you can enter the Subscribe/Unsubscribe information for the
list and have.it appear at the beginning or end of every message or digest
that is sent to the list.
- List Server - Digest
- List server mailing lists can be posted as a
digest. Messages to a list server mailing list can be accumulated and
regularly posted.as a digest. A digest contains a group of messages sent to
the list.
Lists that receive a large volume of messages can give subscribers the
option of periodically receiving a digest rather than being interrupted
every few minutes with a new message from a list.
- List Server - List Commands
- Standard list server mailing list commands are
supported.
Standard list server mailing list commands include:
 | Subscribe listname user_name
 | Unsubscribe listname user_name
 | Help
 | Help listname
 | List
 | List listname
 | Set mode digest listname
 | Set mode standard listname |
| | | | | | |
- List Server - Public or Private
- List server mailing lists can be public or
private.
A list owner can select “Disallow Subscriptions” which will refuse a
Subscribe request to the list. The owner or administrator must add new users
either by editing the Users file, or through the Web Remote Administration
utility. Unsubscribe requests are always honored.
- List Server - Subject Line
- Capability of adding a text string to appear
on the Subject line.
The list owner can choose to display a text string (entered in the Edit
box) at the beginning of the subject line of every message sent to the list.
For example, if you enter [Software-Info] as the defined text string, the
subject line of the messages will appear as follows:
Subject: re: [Software-Info] What do you think of private-labeled
software?
The default string is the name of the list server mailing list.
- List Server Subscribing
- Users can Subscribe to or Unsubscribe from a
list via E-mail. A user can add or delete themselves from a mailing list by
simply stating in the.body of the E-mail sent to imailsrv@list.yourdomain.com,
the following commands:
Subscribe listname user_name
Unsubscribe listname user_name
For Example:
Listname = “software”
Domain Name = “list.yourdomain.com”
User = “John Doe”
To subscribe:
To: imailsrv@list.yourdomain.com
Subject:
Body: Subscribe software John Doe.
To unsubscribe:
To: imailsrv@list.yourdomain.com
Subject:
Body: Unsubscribe software John Doe
- ListServer
- ListServer lets you set up automated mailing
lists on the server. It comes with a control to add/edit/delete users and to
send new messages to your user group (each message has a limit of words).
- Log File Access
- Raw log files are used to track the hits to
your website. You can access them from your root directory.
M
- Mail List
- A system that allows people to send e-mail to
one address, whereupon their message is copied and sent to all of the other
subscribers to the mail list.
- Mailbox
- The directory on a host computer where your
e-mail message are stored. With some systems you can choose between keeping
saved messages on the server or on your local computer.
- Megabyte
- A million bytes
- Message Board
- An electronic message center (also called a
bulletin board); part of the Bulletin Board System (BBS). Message boards are
accessed by dialing in with a modem; once there one may review messages left
by others or leave a message. Bulletin boards are a particularly good place
to find free or inexpensive software products. Most bulletin boards serve
specific interest groups.
- Meta Tag
- An optional HTML tag that is used to specify
information about a Web document. Some search engines such as AltaVista use
"spiders" to index Web pages. These spiders read the information
contained within a page's META tag. So in theory, an HTML or Web page author
has the ability to control how there site is indexed by search engines and
how and when it will come up on a user's search.
The META tag can also be used to specify an HTTP or URL address for the page
to "jump" to after a certain amount of time. This is known as
Client-Pull. What this means, is a Web page author can control the amount of
time a Web page is up on the screen as well as where the browser will go
next. Here's a look at the syntax for search engine indexing: <HTML>
<HEAD><TITLE></TITLE> <META NAME="keywords"
CONTENT="web stuff"> </HEAD> </HTML>
Here's a look at the syntax for Client Pull: <HTML>
<HEAD><TITLE></TITLE> <META
HTTP-EQUIV="REFRESH" CONTENT="30; URL=meta2.html">
</HEAD> </HTML> this will "refresh" or change to the
URL specified in 30 seconds.
- MIME - Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions
- A protocol for Internet e-mail that enables
the transmission of nontextual data such as graphics, audio, video and other
binary types of files. An e-mail program such as Eudora is said to be
"MIME Compliant" if it can both send and receive files using the
MIME standard. When non-text files are sent using the MIME standard they are
converted (encoded) into text - although the resulting text is not really
readable.
Besides e-mail software, the MIME standard is also universally used by Web
servers to identify the files they are sending to Web clients. In this way
new file formats can be accommodated simply by updating the browsers' list
of pairs of MIME-types and appropriate software for handling each type.
- Mirror
- A server that provides copies of the same
files as another server. Some servers are so popular that other servers have
been set up to mirror them and to spread the load on to more than one site.
Many international sites have mirrors set up in other countries to allow
quicker access for their international users.
- Modem - Modulator, Demodulator
- A device connecting a computer and to a phone
line, that allows the computer to talk to other computers through the phone
system. Basically, modems do for computers what a telephone does for humans.
Generally there are 3 types of modems: external, PC Card and internal.
- Moneyback Guarantee
- If you are unhappy with our hosting services
for any reason, you can cancel within the first 30 days and get your money
back! We guarantee you'll be happy with us as your Web host. Try today with
no risk!
- Mosaic
- Mosaic is the common name of a World Wide Web
multimedia browser program developed at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in Urbana-Champaign, Ill. It was the
first Web browser that used the same interface for Macintosh, Windows and
UNIX, and started the popularity of the Web. The official, copyrighted name
of the program is NCSA Mosaic. The source code for Mosaic has been licensed
by several companies, most notably, Netscape.
- MX Record - Mail Exchange Record
- Mail Server records designate the mailservers
that will handle mail for your domain. If you have more than one mailserver,
MX records also specify the order in which the mailservers will be used as
primary, backup, etc.
N
- Navigate
- To move around on the World Wide Web by
following hypertext paths from document to document on different computers.
- Netiquette
- Contraction of Internet etiquette, the
etiquette guidelines for posting messages to online services, and
particularly Internet newsgroups. Netiquette covers not only rules to
maintain civility in discussions (i.e., avoiding flames), but also special
guidelines unique to the electronic nature of forum messages. For example,
netiquette advises users to use simple formats because complex formatting
may not appear correctly for all readers. In most cases, netiquette is
enforced by fellow users who will vociferously object if you break a rule of
netiquette.
- Netscape Navigator
- A highly popular World Wide Web browser. The
program allows for Gopher, FTP, and Telnet access as well as e-mail and
newsgroup retrieval and management. Many companies use Netscape server
software to create Web pages and are therefore written to be best displayed
using Netscape Navigator. The program is available for all platforms and is
especially adept at displaying graphics.
- Network
- Two or more computers that are connected. The
most common types of networks are:
 | LAN - Local Area Network The computers are near each other, in the
same office space, room or building
 | WAN - Wide Area Network The computers are at different geographic
locations and are connected by telephone lines or radio waves. |
|
- Newsgroup
- Same as forum, an on-line discussion group. On
the Internet, there are literally thousands of newsgroups covering every
conceivable interest. To view and post messages to a newsgroup, you need a
newsreader, a program that runs on your computer and connects you to a news
server on the Internet.
- NIC - Networked Information Center
- An office that handles information for a
network. The most famous of these on the Internet is the InterNIC, which is
where new domain names are registered.
- NOC- Network Operations Center
- Responsible for the day-to-day operations of
the Internet's component networks
- NT
- A Windows NT (New Technologies) computer or
server
O
- OC - Optical Center
- Optical Carrier used to specify the speed of
fiber optic networks conforming to the SONET standard
- OC-12
- 622.08 Mbps or 336 T-1's
- OC-48
- 2.488 Mbps
- ODBC Connectivity
- A standard database access method developed by
Microsoft. The goal of ODBC is to make it possible to access any data from
any application, regardless of which database management system (DBMS) is
handling the data. ODBC manages this by inserting a middle layer, called a
database driver , between an application and the DBMS. The purpose of this
layer is to translate the application's data queries into commands that the
DBMS understands. For this to work, both the application and the DBMS must
be ODBC-compliant -- that is, the application must be capable of issuing
ODBC commands and the DBMS must be capable of responding to them. Since
version 2.0, the standard supports SAG SQL.
Two types of ODBC connections are as follows:
Jet Data Engine – This connection allows ODBC-compliant databases
such as Microsoft Access, Foxpro, D-Base and others.
SQL Server – This allows ODBC connection via TCP/IP to a Microsoft
SQL server.
- OLE DB
- Abbreviation of Object Linking and Embedding
(pronounced as separate letters or as "oh-leh"). OLE is a compound
document standard developed by Microsoft Corporation. It enables you to
create objects with one application and then link or embed them in a second
application. Embedded objects retain their original format and link to the
application that created them.
Support for OLE is built into the Windows and Macintosh operating systems. A
competing compound document standard developed jointly by IBM, Apple
Computer, and other computer firms is called OpenDoc.
P
- Packet
- A unit of data sent across a network. Packet
is a generic term used to describe a unit of data at any layer of the OSI
protocol stack, but it is most correctly used to describe application layer
data units (application protocol data units, APDUs).
- Packet Switching
- The method used to move data around on the
Internet. In packet switching, all the data coming out of a machine is
broken up into chunks; each chunk has the address of where it came from and
where it is going. This enables chunks of data from many different sources
to co-mingle on the same lines, and be sorted and directed to different
routes by special machines along the way. This way many people can use the
same lines at the same time.
- Parallel Port
- A parallel interface for connecting an
external device such as a printer. Most personal computers have both a
parallel port and at least one serial port. On PCs, the parallel port uses a
25-pin connector (type DB-25) and is used to connect printers, computers and
other devices that need relatively high bandwidth. It is often called a
Centronics interface after the company that designed the original standard
for parallel communication between a computer and printer. (The modern
parallel interface is based on a design by Epson.)
- Parking
- When two domains point to the same IP Address
or a web address yourdomain.com is parked with no activity with a hosting
company.
- Password
- A secret series of characters that enables a
user to access a file, computer or program. On multi-user systems, each user
must enter a password before the computer will respond to commands. The
password helps ensure that unauthorized users do not access the computer. In
addition, data files and programs may require a password.
Ideally, the password should be something that nobody could guess. Most
people choose a password that is easy to remember, such as their name or
their initials. This is one reason it is relatively easy to break into most
computer systems.
- PGP - Pretty Good Privacy
- A freeware program, developed by Philip
Zimmermann, that allows a user to send e-mail messages to anyone in the
world, in complete privacy. One can also send authentication with your
messages so that the recipient can verify the source of the message. You can
encrypt sensitive files on your computer so that the files remain private
even if your computer and disks are stolen.
- PHP
- PHP Hypertext Preprocessor is a server-side,
HTML-embedded scripting language used to create dynamic Web pages. In an
HTML document, PHP script (similar syntax to that of Perl or C) is enclosed
within special PHP tags. Because PHP is embedded within tags, the author can
jump between HTML and PHP (similar to ASP and Cold Fusion) instead of having
to rely on heavy amounts of code to output HTML. Because PHP is executed on
the server, the client cannot view the PHP code.
PHP can perform any task any CGI program can, but its strength lies in its
compatibility with many types of databases. Also, PHP can talk across
networks using IMAP, SNMP, NNTP, POP3 or HTTP.
- PING - Packet Internet Groper
- An Internet program used to determine whether
a specific IP address is accessible. It works by sending a packet to the
specified address and waiting for a reply, then reporting how many hops are
required to connect two Internet hosts. PING is used primarily to
troubleshoot Internet connections. There are many freeware and shareware
PING utilities available for personal computers.
- Platform
- The type of computer or operating system on
which a software application runs. For example, some common platforms are
PC, Macintosh, Unix and NeXT. When someone knows more than one of these
platforms or when a program can be used on more than one of these platforms,
it is termed cross-platform.
- POP - Post Office Protocol
- POP refers to the protocol used by e-mail
software, such as Eudora or Outlook Express, to retrieve electronic mail
from a mail server. The protocol used by mail clients to retrieve messages
from a mail server. This includes POP1, POP2, and POP3, the number denoting
the different version number of the protocol. POP3 is the most common e-mail
standard. POP is the protocol used by mail clients to retrieve messages from
a mail server.
See Also: E-mail, Protocol
- Port
- 1. A place where information goes into or out
of a computer, or both. For instance, the serial port on a personal computer
is where a modem would be connected.
2. On the Internet, port often refers to a number that is part of a URL,
appearing after a colon (:) right after the domain name. Every service on an
Internet server "listens" on a particular port number on that
server. Most services have standard port numbers; Web servers normally
listen on port 80. Services can also listen on non-standard ports, in which
case the port number must be specified in a URL when accessing the server,
so you might see a URL of the form: gopher://peg.cwis.uci.edu:7000/ which
shows a gopher server running on a non-standard port (the standard gopher
port is 70).
3. To port is to translate a piece of software to bring it from one type of
computer system to another, e.g. to translate a Windows program so that is
will run on a Macintosh.
- PPP - Point-to-Point Protocol
- Communication protocol used over serial lines
to support Internet connectivity.
- Protocol
- Protocol is a set of rules governing behavior
in certain situations. Foreign diplomats learn local protocol to ensure that
they behave correctly in another country. The protocols ensure that there
are no communication breakdowns or serious misunderstandings. Computers need
protocols, too, to ensure that they can communicate with each other
correctly and to ensure data is exchanged correctly. The Internet is made up
of various protocols for various functions.
Q
- Query
- A question usually used in connection with a
search engine or database to find a particular file, Web site, record or set
of records in a database.
R
- RAID5
- RAID is a way of storing the same data in
different places by placing data on multiple hard disks. By placing data on
multiple disks operations can overlap in a balanced way, improving
performance.
- RAM - Random-Access Memory
- Hardware inside your computer that retains
memory on a short-term basis. This information is stored temporarily while
you're working on it. RAM comes in several different forms:
DRAM - Dynamic Random-Access Memory A memory chip contained on such
devices as video and sound cards. DRAM is "dynamic" because the
chip contains an electrical charge (as opposed to SRAM, see below). The
electrical charge will die out eventually so it must refresh its memory
regularly, which it does automatically from your CPU. The only reason you
need to know about DRAM is because it is related to access time and video
cards, etc.
SRAM - Static Random-Access Memory SRAM is used for caching because
it is a lot faster. This chip holds its contents without refreshing from the
CPU.
- RealAudio
- RealNetworks' (formerly Progressive Networks)
RealAudio client-server software system enables Internet and online users
equipped with conventional multimedia personal computers and voice-grade
telephone lines to browse, select and play back audio or audio-based
multimedia content on demand, in real time. This is a real breakthrough
compared to typical download times encountered with delivery of audio over
conventional online methods with which audio is downloaded at a rate that is
five times longer than the actual program.
- RealMedia
- A term encompassing RealNetworks' RealAudio
and RealVideo
- RealVideo
- A streaming technology developed by
RealNetworks (formerly Progressive Networks) for transmitting live video
over the Internet. RealVideo uses a variety of data compression techniques
and works with both normal IP connections as well as IP Multicast
connections.
- Remember My Login
- If you select this option you will not be
prompted for your username and password when entering the site. This maynot
be secure if you are using a public or shared computer. Your computer must
be set to accept cookies to use this feature.
- Remote Terminal
- It is possible to log in to a remote computer
by using an application program based on TELNET - a terminal emulation
protocol made for this purpose. The user can therefore enter commands on a
keyboard attached to their local computer and access files, etc., on a
remote computer that may be located anywhere in the world.
- Router
- Hardware (or software) that connects a local
network to the Internet. Routers look at the destination addresses of the
packets passing through them and decide which route to send them on.
S
- Scalability
- How well a solution to a given issue will work
when the size of the issue increases.
- Script
- Another term for macro or batch file, a script
is a list of commands that can be executed without user interaction. A
script language is a simple programming language with which you can write
scripts.
Apple Computer uses the term script to refer to programs written in its
HyperCard or AppleScript language.
In the context of the World Wide Web, a (gateway) script is a program that
runs on a server and processes requests based on input from the browser.
- Search Engine
- A program which acts like a card catalog for
the Internet. Search engines attempt to help a user isolate desired
information or resources by searching for keywords that the user specifies.
The method for finding this information is usually done by maintaining an
index of Web resources that can be queried for the keywords or concepts
entered by the user. The index can be built from specific resource lists or
created by Web wanderers, robots, spiders, crawlers and worms. From the Net
surfer point of view, search engines can be quite tiresome and not very
fruitful if you don't know how to use them correctly. Different engines are
good for different kinds of searches, so to optimize search results, read
the search engine's help section before searching.
- Server
- A host computer on a network that holds
information (such as Web sites) and responds to requests for information
from it (links to another Web page). The term server is also used to refer
to the software that makes the act of serving information possible. Commerce
servers, for example, use software to run the main functions of an
e-commerce Web site, such as product display, online ordering, and inventory
management. You'll also hear this described as "shopping cart
technology".
- Server has no DNS Entry
- This can mean that the URL you have is an
incorrect address. Netscape finds Web pages by querying a Domain Name Server
(DNS) computer and asking the computer for the numerical address of the name
address in the link. If it does not get a reply, it's because the DNS
computer has no record of the name.
- Shopping Cart
- A shopping cart is a piece of software that
acts as an online store's catalog and ordering process. Typically, a
shopping cart is the interface between a company's Web site and its deeper
infrastructure, allowing consumers to select merchandise; review what they
have selected; make necessary modifications or additions; and purchase the
merchandise.
Shopping carts can be sold as independent pieces of software so companies
can integrate them into their own unique online solution, or they can be
offered as a feature from a service that will create and host a company's
e-commerce site.
- SLIP - Serial Line Internet Protocol
- Communication protocol used over serial lines
to support Internet connectivity.
- SLIP/PPP
- To connect to the Internet via Serial Line
Internet Protocol (SLIP) or Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), you need to have
TCP/IP software on your computer. When connected by SLIP/PPP, your computer
actually becomes another node on the Internet. You can then run popular
client software directly. This has an advantage over a shell account where
you will have to double download in order to transfer a file by FTP because
the data first goes to network and then to a local machine.
- SMTP - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
- The standard Internet protocol for
transferring electronic mail messages
- Solution
- The word tagged onto computer terms when it is
meant to imply that the product or software is meeting the needs and
addressing the "problems" that have been associated with a
particular type of computer software package or application. Usually these
needs are in abundance and encompass a variety of tasks.
- Spam
- To send identical and irrelevant postings to
many different newsgroups or mailing lists. Usually this posting is
something that has nothing to do with the particular topic of a newsgroup or
of no real interest to the person on the mailing list. The name comes from a
Monty Python song and is considered to be a serious violation of netiquette.
- SQL - Structured Query Language
- The standardized query language for requesting
information from a database. The original version called SEQUEL (structured
English query language) was designed by an IBM research center in 1974 and
1975. Oracle Corporation first introduced SQL as a commercial database
system in 1979.
- SQL Server
- A Relational Data Base Management System (RDBMS)
from Sybase Corporation. SQL Server was designed for client/server use and
is accessed by applications using SQL. It runs on OS/2, Windows NT, NetWare
servers, VAXen, and UNIX workstations.
Generically, any database management system (DBMS) that can respond to
queries from client machines formatted in the SQL language. When
capitalized, the term generally refers to either of two database management
products from Sybase and Microsoft. Both companies offer client-server DBMS
products called SQL Server.
- SRAM - Static Random-Access Memory
- SRAM is used for caching because it is a lot
faster. This chip holds its contents without refreshing from the CPU.
- SSI - Server Side Include
- A type of HTML comment that directs the Web
server to dynamically generate data for the Web page whenever it is
requested.
- SSL - Secured Sockets Layer
- A protocol that delivers server
authentication, data encryption and message integrity. SSL is layered
beneath application protocols such as HTTP, SMTP, Telnet, FTP, Gopher and
NNTP, and layered above the connection protocol TCP/IP. This strategy allows
SSL to operate independently of the Internet application protocols. With SSL
implemented on both the client and server, your Internet communications are
transmitted in encrypted form. Information you send can be trusted to arrive
privately and unaltered to the server you specify and no other.
- Static IP
- An IP address which is the same every time you
log on to the Internet. See IP address for more information.
- Streamworks
- The StreamWorks Player brings the power of
networked audio and video to the desktop. You can play "live" and
"on-demand" audio and video from StreamWorks Servers across the
globe. The StreamWorks Transmitter allows for LIVE network encoding of
digital audio and video over today's networks. Taking inputs from analog
audio and video connections, like the ones on the back of a VCR, StreamWorks
Transmitter is capable of enabling live, real-time MPEG audio and video over
industry standard TCP/IP networks.
T
- T-1
- A leased line connection capable of carrying
data at 1,544,000 bits-per-second. At maximum theoretical capacity, a T-1
line could move a megabyte in less than 10 seconds. That is still not fast
enough for full-screen, full-motion video, for which you need at least
10,000,000 bits-per-second. T-1 is the fastest speed commonly used to
connect networks to the Internet.
- T-3
- A leased line connection capable of carrying
data at 44,736,000 bits-per-second. This is more than enough to do
full-screen, full-motion video.
- Tag
- A tag is used to describe a type of command or
instruction usually in regards to HTML or Web page code. HTML tags look like
this:
, , or , always with a pair of brackets (<>)
surrounding the specific instruction.
- TCP/IP - Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol
- This set of protocols makes TELNET, FTP, e-mail, and other services
possible among computers that don't belong to the same network.
- Telnet
- An Internet program for connecting to a remote host or server. The
Telnet interface is text-based and a user usually has to enter their login
name and password before gaining access to the system. Some of the things
that can be done with Telnet access include checking e-mail, downloading
programs and chatting with other Telnet users.
It is one of the oldest Internet activities and is primarily used to
access online databases or to read articles stored on university servers.
It is also possible to Telnet via your Web browser by changing the http://
to telnet:// and entering in the site's address.
- Terabyte
- 1000 Gigabytes
- Terminal
- A device that allows you to send commands to a computer somewhere else.
At a minimum, this usually means a keyboard and a display screen and some
simple circuitry. Usually you will use terminal software in a personal
computer - the software pretends to be ("emulates") a physical
terminal and allows you to type commands to a computer somewhere else.
- Terminal Server
- A special-purpose computer with places to plug in many modems on one
side and with a connection to a LAN or host machine on the other side. The
terminal server answers calls and passes the connections on to the
appropriate node. Most terminal servers can provide PPP or SLIP services
if connected to the Internet.
U
- UNIX
- An operating system, invented in 1969 at
AT&T Bell Laboratories, that was made available to researchers and
students in 1973. It was used to develop the Internet's communication
software protocols.
An interactive time-sharing system invented in 1969 by Ken Thompson after
Bell Labs left the Multics project, originally so he could play games on his
scavenged PDP-7. Dennis Ritchie, the inventor of C, is considered a
co-author of the system. The turning point in UNIX's history came when it
was reimplemented almost entirely in C during 1972--1974, making it the
first source-portable operating system. UNIX subsequently underwent
mutations and expansions at the hands of many different people, resulting in
a uniquely flexible and developer-friendly environment. By 1991, UNIX had
become the most widely used multi-user general-purpose operating system in
the world.
- URL - Uniform Resource Locator
- Describes the location and access method of a
resource on the Internet All Web sites have URLs. One could say a URL is to
a web site as a telephone number is to a telephone or a street address is to
a house. Although Web site URLs are sometimes long and hard to read, many
browsers have a bookmark feature, which allows you to save the location
(URL) of Web sites you want to return to.
The URL "http://www.yourdomain.com" describes the type of access
method being used (http) and the server location which hosts the Web site (www.yourdomain.com).
V
- Vacation Message
- A message automatically sent as a reply to any
message received in a specified mailbox, in this case to inform the original
sender that the recipient is away and will not be able to respond. Also
known as an autoresponder.
- Virtual
- Simulation of the real thing. Means
"almost" or "in effect only". You will see this term
appear before various computer terms to indicate simulation technology that
enables you to cross boundaries and experience something without requiring
its physical presence. The Internet is also seen as a "virtual"
world.
W
- WAN - Wide Area Network
- A network that connects computers over a large
geographic area
- Web Hosting
- Web hosting allows your Web site to be
connected to the Internet at high speed via a Web server so its information
can be viewed globally through a browser. Metaphorically speaking, renting
space on a server is comparable to renting an apartment. For a monthly fee,
you reside in that apartment and all maintenance is the responsibility of
the property. You also have access to certain amenities that would otherwise
be a costly investment. A Web hosting company houses your Web site on its
own secure servers, enabling you to affordably leverage the power of a
high-speed network, 24/7 expert monitoring and support, and state-of-the-art
technology.
- WebTrends
- WebTrends offers Web tracking services, such
as financial, traffic, and more. With WebTrends reporting you can really see
who is hitting your site, and which pages are the most popular. WebTrends
contains graphical and table based reporting, so that you can find vital
information about how your website is being viewed.
- Whois
- A means of looking up names in a remote
database. Used initially as an aid for finding e-mail addresses for people
at large institutions or companies.
- Wideband
- A medium-capacity communications circuit/path.
It usually implies a speed from 64Kbps to 1.544Mbps.
- Windows NT
- Windows NT is a 32-bit operating system that
supports preemptive multitasking.
There are two versions of Windows NT: Windows NT Server is designed to act
as a server in networks, and Windows NT Workstation is for stand-alone or
client workstations
- WWW - World Wide Web
- A system of Internet servers that support
specially formatted documents. The documents are formatted in a language
called HTML (HyperText Markup Language) that supports links to other
documents, as well as graphics, audio, and video files. This means you can
jump from one document to another simply by clicking on hot spots. Not all
Internet servers are part of the World Wide Web.
X
- XML
- Short for extensible markup language, a
specification developed by the <W3C.html>. XML is a pared-down version
of SGML, designed especially for Web documents. It allows designers to
create their own customized tag, enabling the definition, transmission,
validation and interpretation of data between applications and between
organizations.
Y
- Yahoo!
- A World Wide Web subject tree created by David
Filo and Jerry Yang of the Department of Computer Science at Stanford
University. With a keen eye for the popular as well as the useful, Filo and
Yang have created a directory of Web resources that performs a reported 10
million searches across the World Wide Web a week.
Z
- ZV Port
- Short for zoomed video port, a port that
enables data to be transferred directly from a PC Card to a VGA controller.
The port is actually a connection to a zoomed video bus. This new bus was
designed by the PCMCIA to enable notebook computers to connect to real-time
multimedia devices such as video cameras. The first notebook computers with
the ZV port arrived in late 1996.
*Certain terms in this glossary have been
derived from Webopedia and Netlingo. |