Cristian Salinas - Crossword - 2nd Period

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Across
  1. 1. Stands for "Uniform Resource Locator" is the address of a specific web site or file on the Internet.
  2. 3. is 2 to the 30th power in storage or 1,073,741,824 bytes total.
  3. 6. Stands for “Digital Subscriber line” it is a medium for transferring data over regular phone lines and can be used to connect to the Internet.
  4. 8. Stands for "Wide Area Network" It is similar to a Local Area Network (LAN) but it's a lot bigger.
  5. 9. Stands for "Internet Protocol" It provides a standard set of rules for sending and receiving data through the Internet.
  6. 10. Stands for “Central Processing Unit.” This is the pretty much the brain of your computer.
  7. 11. is 2 to the 20th power in storage or 1,048,576 bytes total.
  8. 13. Google,Yahoo, and Infoseek are all search engines that index information on the web.
  9. 16. This is a measurement of screen overlay a resolution of a monitor maybe 640 x 480 which means there are 640 pixels across the screen and 480 pixels up and down the screen.
  10. 17. is a basic unit of measurement for frequency such as sound waves light waves and radio waves but it can also measure the frequency of a Computer Processor Unit.
Down
  1. 1. Stands for "Universal Serial Bus." and is know for being plugged into towers and storing data.
  2. 2. is 2 to the 40th power in storage or 1,099,511,627,776 bytes total.
  3. 4. A software that you used to access the internet and view web pages.
  4. 5. created in 1969 8 inches in diameter and were read only.
  5. 7. is a type of storage space which is nearly the smallest form of internet storage on a electronic.
  6. 12. Stands for "Local Area Network" and is a large amount of internet.
  7. 14. stands for "Hyper Text Transfer Protocol" this is the protocol used to transfer data over the World Wide Web.
  8. 15. Stands for “Domain Name System” the main purpose is to keep web surfers sane to get to websites without the i.p address.
  9. 18. Stands for "Transmission Control Protocol" developed in the early days of the Internet by the U.S. military the purpose was to allow computers to communicate over long distance networks.