Me
Across
- 2. bar refers to the text field in a web browser that identifies the user's location on the web and allows them to access different websites. The address bar is known as a location bar, and in Google Chrome, it's called the Omnibox.
- 4. A search engine is a software system that is designed to carry out web searches, which means to search the World Wide Web in a systematic way for particular information specified in a textual web search query.
- 7. was initially developed to aid in the progress of computing technology by linking academic computer centers. The Internet we use today started being developed in the late 1960s with the start of ARPANET and transmitted its first message on Friday, October 29, 1969. In 1993, the Internet experienced one of its largest growths to date and today is accessible by people all over the world.
- 8. an icon, graphic, or text that links to another file or object. The World Wide Web is comprised of hyperlinks linking trillions of pages and files to one another. For example, the "Computer Hope home page" is a hyperlink to the main page of Computer Hope.
- 9. is a form of URI and standardized naming convention for addressing documents accessible over the Internet and Intranet.
Down
- 1. The physical components of my computer or device
- 3. a browser is a software program to present and explore content on the World
- 4. the programs and other operating information used by a computer
- 5. is a term used to describe text that is written using the protocol of a particular language by a computer programmer. Examples of programming languages include C, C#, C++, Java, Perl, and PHP. Code can also be used in a less formal fashion to refer to text written for markup or styling languages, like HTML and CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). For example, you may see people make reference to code in numerous languages, such as "C code," "PHP code," "HTML code," or "CSS code."
- 6. download is a term used to describe copying data from one computer to another, either over a network or modem. For example, each time you visit a web page on the Internet, you download the information on the page, including any pictures, to your computer. The term download is often associated with pictures, songs, videos, and programs.