Glossary of "Glossary of "Weaving the Web""

Term entries in the "Glossary of "Weaving the Web"" glossary

W3C Glossaries

Showing results 1 - 20 of 95

access control

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

The ability to selectively control who can get at or manipulate information in, for example, a Web server.
accessibility

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

The art of ensuring that, to as large an extent as possible, facilities (such as, for example, Web access) are available to people whether or not they have impairments of one sort or another.
ACSS (Audio cascading style sheets)

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A language for telling a computer how to read a Web page aloud. This is now part of CSS2.
amaya

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

An open source Web browser editor from W3C and friends, used to push leading-edge ideas in Web client design.
apache

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

An open source Web server originally formed by taking all the "patches" (fixes) to the NCSA Web server and making a new server out of it.
browser

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A Web client that allows a human to read information on the Web.
CERN

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

The European Particle Physics Laboratory, located on the French-Swiss border near Geneva, Switzerland.
click-stream

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

Information collected about where a Web user has been on the Web.
client

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

Any program that uses the service of another program. On the Web, a Web client is a program, such as a browser, editor, or search robot, that reads or writes information on the Web.
CSS (Cascading style sheets)

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A W3C recommendation: a language for writing style sheets. See also style sheet.
cyc

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A knowledge-representation project in which a tree of definitions attempts to express real-world facts in a machine-readable fashion. (Now a trademark of Cycorp Inc.)
digital signature

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A very large number created in such a way that it can be shown to have been done only by somebody in possession of a secret key and only by processing a document with a particular content. It can be used for the same purposes as a person's handwritten signature on a physical document. Something you can do with public key cryptography. W3C work addresses the digital signature of XML documents.
DOM (Document object model)

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

Within a computer, information is often organized as a set of "objects." When transmitted, it is sent as a "document." The DOM is a W3C specification that gives a common way for programs to access a document as a set of objects.
domain name

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A name (such as "w3.org") of a service, Web site, or computer, and so on in a hierarchical system of delegated authority- the Domain Name System.
DTD

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

In the SGML world, a DTD is a metadocument containing information about how a given set of SGML tags can be used. In the XML world this role will be taken over by a schema. Sometimes, but arguably, "document type definition." See also schema.
dublin core

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A set of basic metadata properties (such as title, etc.) for classifying Web resources.
EBT (Electronic book technology)

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A company started by Andries Van Dam and others to develop hypertext systems. Later bought by INSO corporation who, it seems, re-used the acronym to be eBusiness Technologies.
EDI (Electronic data interchange)

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A pre-Web standard for the electronic exchange of commercial documents.
enquire

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

A 1980 program, named after the Victorian book Enquire Within upon Everything.
filtering

From Glossary of "Weaving the Web" (1999-07-23)

The setting up of criteria to select a subset of data from a broad stream of it. Filtering information is essential for everyone in daily life. Filtering by parents of small children may be wise. Filtering by others- ISPs or governments- is bad, and is called censorship.

The Glossary System has been built by Pierre Candela during an internship in W3C; it's now maintained by Dominique Hazael-Massieux

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