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When servers from different owners are physically located in the same place and use a common Internet connection, it's called a co-location. If someone wants his machine to be on a high-speed Internet connection, if he doesn't have the possibility to maintain his server, or if he doesn't want security risks, he can choose for co-location in a place with optimum conditions for running a server.
Name of a structured, procedural computer language commonly used for the creation of operating systems and other professional-grade applications.
Device connected to your computer that enables you to receive and request information from the Internet over your local cable TV line. The bandwidth of a cable modem far exceeds the bandwidth of the 28.8 Kbps , ISDN or ADSL modems.
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Area of your computer memory or directory on your hard disk. This is the place where your browser stores viewed Web pages . When you return to a page, the browser gets this page from the cache, saving you time. However, if you return to a page that changes a lot, you need to click the "Reload" button on your browser to get the latest version.
Carbon Copy. To send somebody a copy of an email message.
CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research) is in fact the birth-place of the World Wide Web . One of the researchers of CERN, Dr. Tim Berners-Lee originated the hypertext transport protocol (HTTP ) on which the World Wide Web is based.
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About 1 billion bytes .
1 Kb = 1,024 bytes
1 Mb = 1,024 Kb (= 1,048,576 bytes)
1 Gb = 1,024 Mb (= 1,073,741,824 bytes)
An electronic mail address. Email addresses are in the form of: user@domain (for example: chris@webguest.net).
Most local ISPs offer you an email address - this is called a POP account.
A POP account requires a username and password to access your email. You have to configure your email software to retrieve the email from your POP account. See also email alias.