The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
Activity 11 common online terminologies
1.
2. Email (Electronic Mail)
• Exchanging digital messages
• Email operates across the Internet or other Computer networks
• For any electronic document transmission
• Email servers accept, forward, deliver, and store messages
3. Wiki
• A Web site that allows users to add and update content
on the site using their own Web browser.
• Comes from the Hawaiian phrase, "wiki wiki," which
means "super fast.”
• A fastest way of searching.
4. Social Book Marking
• Centralized online service
• Enabling users to organize their bookmarks in flexible
ways and develop shared vocabularies known as
folksonomies.
5. HTML
HTML or HyperText Markup Language is
the main markup language for creating
web pages and other information that
can be displayed in a web browser.
6. PODCAST
A digital medium consisting of an episodic
series of audio, video, PDF, or ePub files
subscribed to and downloaded through
web syndication or streamed online to a
computer or mobile device.
7. VOIP
A methodology and group of technologies for
the delivery of Voice
Communications and Multimedia sessions
over Internet Protocol (IP) networks, such as
the Internet.
8. ONLINE CHAT
Refer to any kind of communication over the
Internet that offers a real-time transmission
of text messages from sender to receiver.
Chat messages are generally short in order
to enable other participants to respond
quickly.
9. WORLDWIDE
World Wide Web (abbreviated
as WWW or W3, commonly known as the
web) is a system of interlinked hypertext
documents accessed via the Innteret.
With a web browser, one can view web
pages that may contain
text, images, videos, and
other multimedia and navigate between
them via hyperlinks.
10. STREAMING
Multimedia that is constantly received by and
presented to an end-user while being
delivered by a provider. Its verb form, "to
stream", refers to the process of delivering
media in this manner; the term refers to the
delivery method of the medium rather than
the medium itself.
11. BLOG
A discussion or informational site published on the
World Wide Web and consisting of discrete entries
("posts") typically displayed in reverse
chronological order (the most recent post appears
first). Until 2009 blogs were usually the work of a
single individual, occasionally of a small
group, and often covered a single subject
12. SOCIAL NETWORKING
A platform to build social networks or social relations among
people who, for example, share
interests, activities, backgrounds or real-life connections. A
social network service consists of a representation of each
user (often a profile), his social links, and a variety of
additional services. Social networking is web-based
services that allow individuals to create a public profile, to
create a list of users with whom to share connection, and
view and cross the connections within the system.
13. URL
A specific character string that constitutes a reference to a
resource. In most web browsers, the URL of a web page is
displayed on top inside an address bar. An example of a
typical URL would be
"http://en.example.org/wiki/Main_Page". A URL is
technically a type of uniform resource identifier (URI), but
in many technical documents and verbal discussions, URL is
often used as a synonym for URI, and this is not considered
a problem.
14. WEB FEED
A data format used for providing users with
frequently updated content. Content distributors
syndicate a web feed, thereby allowing users to
subscribe to it. Making a collection of web feeds
accessible in one spot is known as
aggregation, which is performed by an aggregator.
A web feed is also sometimes referred to as a
syndicated feed.