World-Wide Web Consortium - meaning and definition. What is World-Wide Web Consortium
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What (who) is World-Wide Web Consortium - definition

EARLY INTERNET SEARCH ENGINE
World-Wide Web Worm

World Wide Web Consortium         
MAIN INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS ORGANIZATION FOR THE WORLD WIDE WEB
W3C; W3c; W3C recommendation; WWWC; W3C Recommendation; W3C Schema; W3-consortium; World wide web consortium; W3C Working Draft; W3C Standard; WWW Consortium; W3C standards; W3.org; W3 Consortium; W³C; W3C organization; Worldwide Web Consortium
<World-Wide Web, body> (W3C) The main standards body for the World-Wide Web. W3C works with the global community to establish international standards for client and server protocols that enable on-line commerce and communications on the Internet. It also produces reference software. W3C was created by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) on 25 October 1994. {Netscape Communications Corporation} was a founding member. The Consortium is run by MIT LCS and INRIA, in collaboration with CERN where the web originated. W3C is funded by industrial members but its products are freely available to all. The director is Tim Berners-Lee who invented the World-Wide Web at the Center for European Particle Research (CERN). http://w3.org/. (1996-11-03)
World Wide Web         
  • A screenshot of a web page on Wikimedia Commons
  • The inside and front of a [[Dell PowerEdge]] web server, a computer designed for [[rack mount]]ing
  • Mosaic]] web browser helped to make the web much more usable, to include the display of images and moving images ([[GIF]]s).
  • The results of a search for the term "lunar eclipse" in a web-based [[image search]] engine
  • Dynamic web page: example of server-side scripting ([[PHP]] and [[MySQL]])
  • usap.gov]] website
  • Multiple web servers may be used for a high traffic website; here, [[Dell]] servers are installed together to be used for the [[Wikimedia Foundation]].
  • Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW, demonstrating [[hyperlink]]s
  • A global map of the [[Web Index]] for countries in 2014
GLOBAL SYSTEM OF INTERLINKED HYPERTEXT DOCUMENTS ACCESSED VIA THE INTERNET
World wide web; WWW; World-Wide Web; The web; The Web; Www; Worldwide Web; Websurfing; World Wide Wait; WorldWide Web; World-wide page; World-wide web; World Wide web; Web-surfers; Webland; Dub dub dub; Triple dub; Dub-dub-dub; Surf the Net; Ideal Web response time; Web surfing; Net surfer; Www.; W³; Worldwide web; Web-based technologies; Net Surfing; Websurfer; Netsurfing; Surfing the net; No-www; Tripple W; Web surfer; Web content security; World Wide Wiretap; Wild Wooly Web; WWW prefix; Internet Surfing; Internet surfing; Web Design and Development; Cybersurfing; World Wide Web Security; Visting the page; Yes-www; Web technology; Web technologies; Www subdomain
The World Wide Web is a computer system which links documents and pictures into a database that is stored in computers in many different parts of the world and that people everywhere can use. The abbreviations WWW
and the Web
are often used. (COMPUTING)
N-PROPER: the N
WWW         
  • A screenshot of a web page on Wikimedia Commons
  • The inside and front of a [[Dell PowerEdge]] web server, a computer designed for [[rack mount]]ing
  • Mosaic]] web browser helped to make the web much more usable, to include the display of images and moving images ([[GIF]]s).
  • The results of a search for the term "lunar eclipse" in a web-based [[image search]] engine
  • Dynamic web page: example of server-side scripting ([[PHP]] and [[MySQL]])
  • usap.gov]] website
  • Multiple web servers may be used for a high traffic website; here, [[Dell]] servers are installed together to be used for the [[Wikimedia Foundation]].
  • Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW, demonstrating [[hyperlink]]s
  • A global map of the [[Web Index]] for countries in 2014
GLOBAL SYSTEM OF INTERLINKED HYPERTEXT DOCUMENTS ACCESSED VIA THE INTERNET
World wide web; WWW; World-Wide Web; The web; The Web; Www; Worldwide Web; Websurfing; World Wide Wait; WorldWide Web; World-wide page; World-wide web; World Wide web; Web-surfers; Webland; Dub dub dub; Triple dub; Dub-dub-dub; Surf the Net; Ideal Web response time; Web surfing; Net surfer; Www.; W³; Worldwide web; Web-based technologies; Net Surfing; Websurfer; Netsurfing; Surfing the net; No-www; Tripple W; Web surfer; Web content security; World Wide Wiretap; Wild Wooly Web; WWW prefix; Internet Surfing; Internet surfing; Web Design and Development; Cybersurfing; World Wide Web Security; Visting the page; Yes-www; Web technology; Web technologies; Www subdomain
World Wide Waiting (Reference: slang)

Wikipedia

World Wide Web Worm

The World Wide Web Worm (WWWW) was one of the earliest search engines for the World Wide Web (WWW). It was developed in September 1993 by Oliver McBryan at the University of Colorado as a research project. It is claimed by some to be the first search engine, though it was not released until March 1994, by which time a number of other search engines had been made publicly available.

The worm created a database of 300,000 multimedia objects which could be obtained or searched for keywords via the WWW. It indexed about 110,000 webpages as of 1994. In contrast to present-day search engines, the WWWW featured support for Perl regular expressions.

The website, http://www.cs.colorado.edu/home/mcbryan/WWWW.html, is no longer accessible (archive). Circa 1997 Goto.com purchased WWWW's technology. McBryan stated in a 2016 podcast that WWWW was an educational project and he never thought of commercializing it like Excite or Yahoo! did, partly because the University did not have a department that dealt specifically with such computer technology.

Examples of use of World-Wide Web Consortium
1. So we‘re still working on it," he told a lecture last month at Oxford University (webcast at http://tinyurl.com/mxysy; slides at http://tinyurl.com/rol4x). The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which Berners–Lee directs, has been working on it by producing standards to allow the linking of data, including the Resource Description Framework (RDF), a language for information about the meaning of data.
2. The systems that make it work are organised by technical bodies such as the non–profit Internet Corporation for Assigned Name and Numbers (ICANN), which oversees the internets domain–name and dot.address systems, the Internet Engineering Task Force and the World Wide Web Consortium.
3. Britain‘s turn to host the gathering of the world‘s foremost webmasters is long overdue, particularly since the event will be headed, as always, by Sir Tim Berners–Lee, a Briton, who is the director of the World Wide Web Consortium and widely recognised as the father of the web.
4. Today, a complicated bureaucracy of groups known by their abbreviations help govern the network÷ the IETF (the Internet Engineering Task Force, which comes up with the technical standards), ICANN (the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, which manages the naming system for Web sites) and the W3C (the World Wide Web Consortium, which develops technologies for the Web). But their power is limited and their legal standing murky.