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  2. Justin Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Hall

    Born in Chicago, Hall graduated Francis W. Parker High School in 1993. In 1994, while a student at Swarthmore College, Justin started his web-based diary Justin's Links from the Underground, which offered one of the earliest guided tours of the web. [1]

  3. Ajax (programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajax_(programming)

    With Ajax, web applications can send and retrieve data from a server asynchronously (in the background) without interfering with the display and behaviour of the existing page. By decoupling the data interchange layer from the presentation layer, Ajax allows web pages and, by extension, web applications, to change content dynamically without ...

  4. LIHKG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LIHKG

    In 2016, HKG+, a 3rd party app of HKGolden was suspended by HKGolden. [7] On 21 November 2016, the developer of HKG+ announced on their Facebook page that they have shared part of the source code of the app with another developers, Hui Yip-hang (許業珩, known as 連尼住 on the forum) and 望遠.

  5. Vimeo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vimeo

    Vimeo, Inc. (/ ˈ v ɪ m i oʊ /) [3] is an American video hosting, sharing, services provider, and broadcaster headquartered in New York City.Vimeo focuses on the delivery of high-definition video across a range of devices.

  6. Schema.org - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schema.org

    Schema.org is a reference website that publishes documentation and guidelines for using structured data mark-up on web-pages (called microdata).Its main objective is to standardize HTML tags to be used by webmasters for creating rich results (displayed as visual data or infographic tables on search engine results) about a certain topic of interest. [2]

  7. History of blogging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_blogging

    While the term "blog" was not coined until the late 1990s, the history of blogging starts with several digital precursors to it. Before "blogging" became popular, digital communities took many forms, including Usenet, commercial online services such as GEnie, BiX and the early CompuServe, e-mail lists [1] [2] and Bulletin Board Systems (BBS).

  8. Source lines of code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_lines_of_code

    Source lines of code ... is a software metric used to measure the size of a computer program by counting the number of lines in the text of the program's source code.

  9. ANSI escape code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code

    The Xterm terminal emulator. In the early 1980s, large amounts of software directly used these sequences to update screen displays. This included everything on VMS (which assumed DEC terminals), most software designed to be portable on CP/M home computers, and even lots of Unix software as it was easier to use than the termcap libraries, such as the shell script examples below in this article.