World Wide Web
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... allows simple browsing and neither is particularly easy for the
newcomer to learn to use. Gopher and the World Wide Web (W3) are
two recent developments that attempt to make it easier to
distribute information over the Internet ...
... of November 1993, there were over 2200 known servers.
World Wide Web relies on hypertext; formatted documents are
displayed, and hypertext links within the document can be selected
...
... range of free W3 clients,
supporting many environments. World Wide Web was originally
developed at CERN for the High Energy Physics Community.
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... gateway to all Gopher menus, files, and searches. We hope to
have WAIS indices and World Wide Web documents online in the near
future.
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... the existing Gopher gateway feature for World Wide Web. There is
also active work being done on exporting WAIS indices through
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... internet information services, including
Gopher, WAIS, Archie, and World Wide Web. The paper was
presented at INET'93 in August.
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... and has support to run executable programs on the local machine
so that it can be used as a menuing system. Lynx is a part of
the World Wide Web (WWW) project and has all of the features
of a WWW client including HTML ...
... client interface to a wide
variety of networked information systems, including World Wide Web,
Gopher, WAIS, FTP ...
... host discussions
about the World Wide Web distributed hypertext
information services project based at CERN in
...
... clients
and servers available.
Keywords: World Wide Web, campus-wide information
systems, resource discovery, indexing, Internet
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... Other NIR tools this interworks with: gopher, WAIS, World Wide Web
Future plans: Too numerous to mention.
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