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World Wide Web The exact definition of the World Wide Web (popularly known as the Web) varies, depending on whom you ask. Three common descriptions are: A collection of resources (Gopher, FTP, http, telnet, Usenet, WAIS, and others) that can be accessed via a web browser. A collection of hypertext files available on web servers. A set of specifications (protocols) that allows the transmission of web pages over the Internet. You can think of the Web as a worldwide collection of text and multimedia files and other network services interconnected via a system of hypertext documents. Http (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) was created in 1990, at CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland, as a means for sharing scientific data internationally, instantly, and inexpensively. With hypertext, a word or phrase can contain a link to other text. To achieve this, CERN developed a programming language called HTML, that allows you to easily link to other pages or network services on the Web. |