2. 1. Email
2. Wiki
3. Social Bookmarking
4. HTML
5. Podcast
6. VoIP
7. Online Chat
8. WWW
9. Streaming
10. Blog
11. Social Networking
12. URL
13. Web Feed
3. Short term for Electronic Mail. It is
a method of exchanging digital
messages between an individual or
group of individuals.
It may contain images ,files ,and
other attachments depending on
how will you use it.
It can be used through the use of
internet or other communication
networks. • The first e-mail was sent
by Ray Tomlinson in 1971.
4. The first wiki was created in 1995
for the Portland Pattern Repository
and is known to be the simplest
online database that could possibly
work.
It is an open editing database
allowing any user to add and update
information, create new pages, etc.
all over the Internet. The community
then decides what information is
good or what information is bad.
"Wiki" (pronounced [ˈwiti] or [ˈ
viti]) is a Hawaiian word meaning
"fast" or "quick".
5. Allows users to add, annotate,
edit, and share bookmarks of web
documents.
Useful when accessing
consolidated sets of bookmarks from
various computers.
It can also be used in organizing
large number of bookmarks and
sharing bookmarks to others.
6. Developed by Tim Berners-Lee in
1990.
Short for HyperText Markup
Language. It is a language used to
create electronic documents,
especially pages on the World Wide
Web that contain connections called
hyperlinks to other pages.
Used in formatting online pages
through the use of codes to show
texts and images in an easy to read
format.
7. Alternatively referred to as an
audioblog.
It is an audio broadcast that is
often listened to on a computer or
smartphones that we have
nowadays.
8. VoIP(Voice over Internet Protocol)
is an internet protocol that allows
users to make calls through the use
of internet instead of using
telephones.
Cheaper than using telephones but
sometimes at a lower audio quality.
VoIP also is referred to as Internet
telephony, IP telephony, or Voice
over the Internet (VOI).
9. May refer to any kind of
communication over the internet that
offers a real-time transmission of text
messages from sender to receiver.
It can be done by one-on-one chat
or one-to-many group chat using
direct text-based or video-based
(webcams).
The first online chat system was
called Talkomatic, created by Doug
Brown and David R. Woolley in 1974
on the PLATO System at the
University of Illinois.
10. WWW(World Wide Web) also called web is a
graphical interface for the Internet that was first
introduced to the public on August 6,1991 by Tim
Berners-Lee.
Is a system of interlinked hypertext documents
accessed via the Internet.
In March 1989 Tim Berners-Lee wrote a proposal
for what would eventually become the World Wide
Web.
Berners-Lee and Belgian computer scientist
Robert Cailliau proposed in 1990 to use hypertext "to
link and access information of various kinds as a web
of nodes in which the user can browse at will", and
Berners-Lee finished the first website in December of
that year. Berners-Lee posted the project on the
alt.hypertext newsgroup on 7 August 1991.
11. Streaming or Streaming media is
multimedia that is constantly
received by and presented to an
end-user while being delivered by a
provider.
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.
12. A weblog or blog, is a listing of
text, images, or other objects that
are arranged in a chronological
order that first started appearing in
1998.
A Web page that serves as a
publicly accessible personal journal
for an individual. Typically updated
daily, blogs often reflect the
personality of the author.
The term "weblog" was coined by
Jorn Barger on 17 December 1997.
The short form, "blog", was coined
by Peter Merholz, who jokingly broke
the word weblog into the phrase we
blog in the sidebar of his blog
Peterme.com in April or May 1999.
13. Alternatively referred to as a virtual community or
profile site, a social network is a web site on the internet
that brings people together in a central location to talk,
share ideas, share interests, make new friends, etc.
This type of collaboration and sharing of data is often
referred to as social media.
Unlike traditional media that is often created by no
more than 10 people, social media sites contain content
that has been created by hundreds or even millions of
different people.
The term itself was coined in 1954 by J. A. Barnes.
14. URL(Uniform Resource Locator) also known as web address is a specific
character string that constitutes a reference to a resource.
It is a form of URI and is a standardized naming convention for addressing
documents accessible over the Internet or Intranet.
It is the global address of documents and other resources on the World Wide
Web.
15. A web feed (or news feed) is a data format used for
providing users with frequently updated content.
A web feed is a document (often XML-based) whose
discrete content items include web links to the source of
the content. News websites and blogs are common
sources for web feeds, but feeds are also used to deliver
structured information ranging from weather data to topten lists of hit tunes to search results. The two main web
feed formats are RSS and Atom.
16. Online terminologies are crucially important in today’s
generation. One of the most critical changes that has to
be learned by people is about the internet. And because
of that, online terminologies must be familiar to people
today in order to cope up with our changing environment.
That is also why we should be intellectually aware of the
cyber world. The more we know about this aspects, the
more we see the advantages and faults of our world
today.