2. EMAIL
Email,
sometimes written as e-mail, is simply
the shortened form of “electronic mail,” a
system for receiving, sending, and storing
electronic messages. It has gained nearly
universal popularity around the world with
the spread of the Internet. In many
cases, email has become the preferred
method for both personal and business
communication.
3. BLOG
A
blog (a truncation of the
expression web log) is 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).
4. ONLINE CHAT
Online
chat may refer to any kind
of communication over
the Internet that offers a realtime transmission of text messages
from sender to receiver.
5. SOCIAL BOOKMARKING
It
is tagging a website and saving it
for later. Instead of saving them to
your web browser, you are saving
them to the web. And, because
your bookmarks are online, you
can easily share them with friends.
6. URL
Abbreviation of Uniform Resource Locator (URL) it
is the globaladdress of documents and
other resources on the World Wide Web.
The first part of the URL is called a protocol
identifier and it indicates what protocol to use, and
the second part is called aresource name and it
specifies the IP address or the domain name where
the resource is located. The protocol identifier and
the resource name are separated by a colon and
two forward slashes.
7. STREAMING
Streaming media is 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.
8. PODCAST
A podcast or netcast is 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.
The word is a neologism and portmanteau derived
from "broadcast" and "pod" from the success of
the iPod, as audio podcasts are often listened to
on portable media players.
9. VOLP
voice-over
internet protocol: a system
for converting analogue signals to
digital so that telephone calls may be
made over the internet.
voice-over internet protocol: a system
for converting analogue signals to
digital so that telephone calls may be
made over the internet
10. WIKI
usually
a web application which
allows people to add, modify, or
delete content
in collaboration with others.
Text is usually written using a
simplified markup language or
a rich-text editor.
11. SOCIAL NETWORKING
a social structure made up of a set of social actors
(such as individuals or organizations) and a set of
the dyadic ties between these actors.
The social network perspective provides a set of
methods for analyzing the structure of whole social
entities as well as a variety of theories explaining
the patterns observed in these structures.
12. WWW( WORLD WIDE WEB)
a system of interlinked hypertextdocuments
accessed via the Internet. With a web
browser, one can view web pages that may
contain text, images, videos, and
othermultimedia and navigate between
them via hyperlinks.
13. HTML
HyperText
Markup Language is the
main markup language for
creating web pages and other
information that can be displayed in
a web browser.
HTML is written in the form of HTML
elements consisting of tags enclosed
in angle brackets (like <html>), within
the web page content.
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.