- World Wide Web: Definition, history and facts - Live Science
In 1993, a researcher at CERN called Tim Berners-Lee started building a layer on top of the internet to make it easier to access, according to the World Wide Web Foundation
- What Is WWW (World Wide Web)? Definition, How It Works History
The World Wide Web -- also known as the web, WWW or W3 -- refers to all the public websites or pages that users can access on their local computers and other devices through the internet
- How the World Wide Web works - Explain that Stuff
An easy-to-understand explanation of the Web and how it's different from the Internet Covers clients, browsers, servers, HTTP, HTML, and URLs
- What is the Web? Definition, How It Works Features - Techopedia
The Web is the common name for the World Wide Web, a subset of the Internet that consists of interlinked web pages and online resources that can be accessed by a web browser
- About The World Wide Web
The World Wide Web (known as "WWW', "Web" or "W3") is the universe of network-accessible information, the embodiment of human knowledge The World Wide Web began as a networked information project at CERN, where Tim Berners-Lee, now Director of the World Wide Web Consortium [W3C], developed a vision of the project
- World Wide Web - New World Encyclopedia
The World Wide Web (commonly shortened to the Web) is a system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet With a Web browser, one can view Web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them using hyperlinks
- What is the WWW (World Wide Web)? - Computer Hope
Short for World Wide Web, WWW, W3, or web is a graphical interface for the Internet that was introduced to the public on August 6, 1991, by Tim Berners-Lee A few days later on August 23, 1991, it was available to everyone WWW was featured as a top term of 1991 How is the Internet different than the WWW? What software lets you access the WWW?
- How the web works - Learn web development | MDN - MDN Web Docs
How the web works provides a high-level description of what happens when you use a web browser to navigate to a web page, explaining the magic that goes on behind the scenes to deliver the relevant code to your computer for the browser to assemble into something you can look at
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