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  2. Open access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_access

    Self-archiving by authors is permitted under green OA. Independently from publication by a publisher, the author also posts the work to a website controlled by the author, the research institution that funded or hosted the work, or to an independent central open repository, where people can download the work without paying.

  3. Semantic Web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_Web

    This enables automated agents to access the Web more intelligently and perform more tasks on behalf of users. The term "Semantic Web" was coined by Tim Berners-Lee, [7] the inventor of the World Wide Web and director of the World Wide Web Consortium ("W3C"), which oversees the development of proposed Semantic Web standards. He defines the ...

  4. Access key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Access_key

    In a web browser, an access key or accesskey allows a computer user to immediately jump to a specific web page via the keyboard. They were introduced in 1999 and ...

  5. Progressive web app - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_web_app

    Progressive web apps employ the progressive enhancement web development strategy. Some progressive web apps use an architectural approach called the App Shell Model. [26] In this model, service workers store the Basic User Interface or "shell" of the responsive web design web application in the browser's offline cache. This model allows for ...

  6. Web application - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_application

    A web browser is the first tier (presentation), an engine using some dynamic Web content technology (such as ASP, CGI, ColdFusion, Dart, JSP/Java, Node.js, PHP, Python or Ruby on Rails) is the middle tier (application logic), and a database is the third tier (storage). [6]

  7. History of the World Wide Web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_World_Wide_Web

    The underlying concept of hypertext as a user interface paradigm originated in projects in the 1960s, from research such as the Hypertext Editing System (HES) by Andries van Dam at Brown University, IBM Generalized Markup Language, Ted Nelson's Project Xanadu, and Douglas Engelbart's oN-Line System (NLS).

  8. Deep linking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_linking

    The technology behind the World Wide Web, the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), does not actually make any distinction between "deep" links and any other links—all links are functionally equal. This is intentional; one of the design purposes of the Web is to allow authors to link to any published document on another site.

  9. Web conferencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_conferencing

    Web conferencing is used as an umbrella term for various types of online conferencing and collaborative services including webinars (web seminars), webcasts, and web meetings. Sometimes it may be used also in the more narrow sense of the peer-level web meeting context, in an attempt to disambiguate it from the other types known as collaborative ...