FTP - File Transfer Protocol: a software protocol for exchanging information between computers over a network.
Server - a computer that makes services, as access to data files, programs, and peripheral devices, available to workstations on a network.
Webserver - A computer program that is responsible for accepting [] requests from web clients, which are known as web browsers, and serving them HTTP responses along with optional data contents, which usually are web pages such as HTML documents and linked objects (images, etc.).
Domain name is a name given to a collection of network devices that belong to a domain which is an administrative space managed according to some common characteristics of the members. For example, the computers of a corporate network running Windows NT services are said to belong to a domain (NT domain). In particular, the term domain name is best known in connection with the Internet where it describes the regions of administrative authority within the Domain Name System, the facility to locate resources on the Internet.
HTML
HyperText Markup Language: a set of standards, a variety of SGML, used to tag the elements of a hypertext document. It is the standard protocol for formatting and displaying documents on the World Wide Web.
HTTP
hypertext transfer protocol: the standard protocol for transferring hypertext documents on the World Wide Web.
Upload
To transfer (data or programs), usually from a peripheral computer or device to a central, often remote computer.
ISP Internet service provider is a company which primarily offers their customers access to the Internet using dial-up or other means of data telecommunication. ISPs may provide Internet e-mail accounts to users which allow them to communicate with one another by sending and receiving electronic messages through their ISPs' servers.
URL
1.Uniform Resource Locator: a protocol for specifying addresses on the Internet.
2.an address that identifies a particular file on the Internet, usually consisting of the protocol, as http, followed by the domain name.
Monday, September 22, 2008
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