A program that allows a person to view web pages and navigate between pages.
A fast memory holding recently accessed data, designed to speed up subsequent access to the same data. Often applied to a local copy of data accessible over the Web.
A networked group of computers whose hostnames share a common suffix—the domain name.
A client-server protocol which allows a user on one computer to transfer files to and from another computer over a TCP/IP network.
A record of visited web pages over a period of time, affecting the coloring of the links.
A system connected to a network.
A Hypertext document language format used on the Web, and built on top of SGML (Standard Generalized markup Language).
The client-server TCP/IP protocol used on the Web for the exchange of HTML documents.
A variant of HTTP for handling secure transactions.
The host address defined by the Internet Protocol. It is usually represented in dotted decimal notation.
A general-purpose programming standalone language that creates animation and other object-oriented functions on web pages.
A set of rules describing how to transmit data across a network. Low-level protocols define the electrical and physical standards to be observed, while high-level protocols deal with data formatting.
A computer and associated software that provides clients behind a firewall with a trusted agent that can access the Web on their behalf, while not revealing their IP addresses.
A computer and associated software that provides clients behind a firewall with a trusted agent that can access the Web on their behalf, while not revealing their IP addresses.
A security package that allows a host behind a firewall to access resources outside the firewall while maintaining security requirements.
A network device that provides service to network users by managing shared resources.
A standard for specifying an object on the Web, such as a file or a newsgroup. URLs are used extensively on the Web in HTML documents for specifying the target of a hyperlink.