2. E-MAIL (ELECTRONIC MAIL)
used in exchanging
digital messages from
an author to one or
more recipients.
Modern email
operates through
the Internet or
other computer
networks.
3. WIKI
• is usually a web
application which permits
people to add, revise, or
remove content
in collaboration with others.
Text is usually written using a
simplified mark-up
language or a rich-text editor.
• Ward Cunningham invented
this web application
4. SOCIAL
BOOKMARKING
•
centralized online service which
enables users to
add, annotate, edit, and
share bookmarks of web
documents.
•
Many online bookmark
management services have
launched since 1996
•
Delicious, founded in
2003, popularized the terms
"social bookmarking" and
"tagging".
5. HTML
(HYPERTEXT MARKUP
LANGUAGE)
•
is the main mark-up
language for creating web
pages and other information
that can be displayed in a web
browser.
•
written in the form of HTML
elements consisting
of tags enclosed in angle
brackets (like <html>), within
the web page content.
6. PODCAST
•
is a digital medium consisting of
an episodic series
of audio, video, PDF, or ePub file
s subscribed to
and downloaded through web
syndication or streamed online
to a computer or mobile device.
7. VOICE OVER INTERNET
PROTOCOL (VOIP)
•
is a methodology and group
of technologies for the
delivery of voice
communications and multim
edia sessions over Internet
Protocol (IP) networks, such
as the Internet.
8. ONLINE CHAT
•
may 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. Thereby, a feeling similar to a
spoken conversation is created, which
distinguishes chatting from other text-based
online communication forms such
as Internet forums and email.
9. WORLD WIDE WEB
•
is a system of
interlinked hypertext documents
accessed via the Internet. 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
•
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.
11. SOCIAL
NETWORKING
•
is the grouping of individuals into
specific groups, like small rural
communities or a neighborhood
subdivision, if you will. Although
social networking is possible in
person, especially in the
workplace, universities, and high
schools, it is most popular online.
12. UNIFORM RESOURCE
LOCATOR (URL)
•
is 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.
•
URLs are commonly used for
web pages (http:), but can also
be used for file
transfer, email, telephone
numbers and many other
applications
13. BLOG
•
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).
•
Many blogs provide commentary on a
particular subject; others function as
more personal online diaries; others
function more as online brand
advertising of a particular individual or
company.
•
A typical blog combines
text, images, and links to other
blogs, Web pages, and other media
related to its topic.
14. WEB FEED
•
is a data format used for
providing users with frequently
updated content.
•
Content distributors syndicate a
web feed, thereby allowing
users to subscribe to it.
•
is also sometimes referred to
as a syndicated feed.