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Wat (wie) is news:comp infosystems www users - definitie

HOW TO PRONOUNCE "WWW", "DOUBLE-U DOUBLE-U, DOUBLE-U" OR SOMETHING ELSE
Pronunciation of ‘www’; Pronunciation of WWW; Pronunciation of 'www'; Pronunciation of www

Dynamic/Dialup Users List         
Dial-up User List; Dial-up user list; Dialup Users List; DULs - Dynamic/Dialup Users List
A Dial-up/Dynamic User List (DUL) is a type of DNSBL which contains the IP addresses an ISP assigns to its customer on a temporary basis, often using DHCP or similar protocols. Dynamically assigned IP addresses are contrasted with static IP addresses which do not change once they have been allocated by the service provider.
Pronunciation of "www"         
WWW (or www) is an initialism for World Wide Web. In English, WWW is the longest possible three-letter abbreviation when spoken, requiring six to nine syllables, depending on how it is pronounced, whereas the twelve letters in "World Wide Web" are pronounced with three syllables.
Extreme users         
  • Vint Cerf (right) pictured in 2007
DESIGN CONCEPT
Draft:Extreme Characters (user experience); Draft:Extreme users
Extreme Characters (also known as brink users and extreme users) is a methodology used within user-centered design in order to represent edge case users of a product, brand or user interface. Extreme Characters also fits under the umbrella of market segmentation within marketing as it formulates design solutions for both average users and extreme, brink users.

Wikipedia

Pronunciation of "www"

WWW (or www) is an initialism for World Wide Web. In English, WWW is the longest possible three-letter abbreviation when spoken, requiring six to nine syllables, depending on how it is pronounced, whereas the twelve letters in "World Wide Web" are pronounced with three syllables. The English writer Douglas Adams once quipped:

The World Wide Web is the only thing I know of whose shortened form takes three times longer to say than what it's short for.

Tim Berners-Lee rejected suggestions to change the World Wide Web name over pronunciation issues, arguing that this peculiar feature of the name would make it memorable. As his invention gradually gained ubiquity, it came to be called simply the Web.