Internet
Glossary
A
Ad clicks: When a visitor uses an advertisement link to go
to another website.
Ad copy: The text used for an advertising campaign.
Ad inventory: The number of ads a website or publication can
sell in a given period.
Ad views (or impressions): When a visitor pulls an advertisement's
image from the server, it is assumed they saw it and have the opportunity
to visit the advertiser's website by clicking on the link. One person
looking at one ad.
Access service provider: A company providing access to the
internet through a variety of methods, possibly including dial-up, cable
modem, wireless, and DSL.
ActiveX: A programming language supported by Microsoft Internet
Explorer which works a lot like Java. ActiveX is more invasive than
Java, and can transmit computer viruses. If you use Explorer, turn off
ActiveX.
AIM: AOL Instant Messenger.
Affiliate program: An advertising program offering a monetary
incentive for webmasters to drive traffic to the advertiser's website.
This eliminates the necessity for the advertiser to find websites with
related content to list their banners. It also increases the response
rate by giving the "affiliate" websites a stake in the response
rate. Affiliate programs are a great plan for the websites offering
them, but the websites that participate often become underpaid sales
representatives.
Article bots: Computer programs that search for articles on
your favorite subject. They're the oldest bots. Find one of your own
at BotSpot.
ASL (or a/s/l): Marketing abbreviation for the Age, Sex and Location
of people an ad will be presented to. Many experienced advertisers and
ad agencies will ask you for this demographic information about your
website or newsletter.
Augmented product: A product that is improved in some way.
An example would be a bacon cheeseburger (as opposed to a simple hamburger).
Authentication: Technique which allows access to certain webpages
only by offering a username and password. This process shows that the
person entering the pages is an authorized user.
Autoresponder: A program which will respond to your email immediately
with a pre-designed response. They're great for confirmation messages,
but be careful not to rely on them too heavily.
B
Bandwidth: How many bits are transferred between the server
and its visitors. The more (and bigger) graphics and downloadable files
you offer on your website, the more bandwidth your site will take, increasing
the time visitors must spend on your website, and the amount of resources
your host must spend on you. Taking up too much bandwidth may drive
visitors away or force your host to charge you more to support your
website.
Beacon pages: A webpage created to increase search engine rankings
by increasing the number of "related" pages linking to your
main website. They take advantage of search engines' new emphasis on
pages that have many links from related websites in determining relevance
to a search term.
BCC: Blind carbon copy. This is a field in your email program
that will send a copy of your message to a person without the primary
recipient knowing. The email address of the BCC recipient will not appear
on the resulting email, and any replies to the message will not be sent
to them.
BRB: Chat or bulletin board abbreviation for "Be right
back."
Browser: A program used to find and interpret HTML documents on
the internet. The most popular browsers are Microsoft Internet Explorer
and Netscape, in that order.
BTW: Email and newsgroup abbreviation of "by the way."
C
Campaign: The advertising and promotion done during a given period
of time.
Catch-all: A program that allows any email sent to your domain
to go to a particular email address. That allows any email sent to a
misspelled or unused username will still get to a person who can deal
with them.
CGI script: A program, often written in the PERL programming
language, written to run on any computer. They add value to a website
by doing any number of cute things. For example, a CGI script can send
a visitor to a "thank you" page when they submit a form. They
normally go in a separate folder from your HTML files.
Click through rate: The percentage of users who click on a
viewed advertisement. It shows how effective the ad is, when compared
to the average rate of the media.
Client: The browser used by a visitor to a website.
Client errors: An error occurring due to a bad request by the
visitor's browser, such as typing in a page name that doesn't exist.
Client errors will show error numbers in the 400 range in your log analysis
program.
.com: Suffix indicating a commercial domain.
Comment tag: An HTML tag. <!-- Your Comment Here -->
It is invisible to your website visitors, but many search engine spiders
index them. Use them to mark parts of your page for future revision,
as another place to put your site description, and possibly another
place to list keywords.
Cookies: These aren't the kind your Grandma used to make! Web
cookies are files containing information about visitors to a website,
like username, password, and what they want to buy. It is stored on
the visitor's computer, and sent back to the website that created it
when the visitor comes back or gets to the order page. Cookies can also
retrieve information like monitor resolution and platform to webmasters
who intend to use this information to improve their website.
core product: The product a business is built around. For instance,
McDonald's core product is the Big Mac.
Counter: A CGI script which counts the number of times your
page is requested by visitors. Remember that a visitor which visits
your page more than once will be counted every time.
CPA: Cost per action for banner ads. This is the best type
of rate to pay for banner advertisements, and the worst type of rate
to charge. Advertisers only pay for the visitors who click on their
banner and then sign up, fill out a form, or purchase something on their
website. This is most common for Affiliate Programs. My opinion is this
type of payment arrangement is already an endangered species, and will
soon become extinct.
CPC: Cost per click through for banner ads. The advertiser
only pays when a visitor clicks on their banner (whether or not the
visitor waits for their page to load before leaving). Look for this
type of rate when you plan to place a banner on a website with related
content.
CPM: Cost per thousand (impressions or subscribers). CPM is
a marketing term you will see often when researching banner and magazine
ad rates. It helps you determine how much you are spending per person
viewing your ad, and the company by allowing them to charge more as
their subscriber base or hit count increases without changing their
posted ad rates. If you are planning to offer advertising, this is the
way to do it.
Cracker: A person who breaks into copyrighted software to illegally
duplicate it or remote computers to destroy information.
CSS: Cascading Style Sheets. They let you assign the look of
different elements of each webpage in your website. They're an HTML
4.0 feature, so older browsers may not support them.
Cyberspace: The Internet. The phrase was coined in 1984 by
William Gibson in his book, Neuromancer.
D
DBMS: DataBase Management System.
Demographics: The types of people looking at a given advertising
medium. (For example: 25-30 year old males making $50,000-$100,000 per
year, with blond hair and green eyes.)
Dial-up service provider: An Internet Service Provider accessible
through telephone lines by modem.
Digest: An email message containing several postings to a mailing
list. Lists often inundate members with postings, and digests help people
with less time keep up.
Directory: A list of websites, usually organized by category.
Many directories are searchable, but they are different from search
engines because they just list your home page. They don't spider your
site, so any hidden descriptions or keywords will not count toward the
relevancy of your page in any given search.
Discussion list: A group of people discussing a particular
topic by email.
DNS: Domain Name Server. A program which automatically translates domain
names into their correct IP address
Domain: An area on the internet assigned to a particular company.
Each area is assigned its own numeric IP address and a text name. If
one server has more than one, they are considered "virtual"
domains.
domain name: The text name assigned to a website. A domain name example
would be www.busymarketing.com.
Doorway pages: A webpage designed to rank well on a specific
search engine for a specific Keyword Phrase These pages usually rely
on frequent repetition of the keyword phrase, and often try to "trick”
search engine into ranking them well. See my article on Doorway Pages
for more information.
Download: The transfer of information from the Internet to
your computer. The information could be a webpage, email, or a program.
Downloading things can be dangerous, so be sure to use Protection before
engaging in intercourse with other computers. (In other words, if you're
going to be on the Internet, get a good virus protection program.)
DSL: Digital Subscriber Line. A method of connecting to the
Internet permanently via a high-bandwidth phone line. They're faster
than dial-up service, and you can be on the phone and the Internet at
the same time without purchasing an additional phone line. They're also
more expensive and temperamental than phone lines.
DSVD: Digital Simultaneous Voice and Data.
E
E-Commerce: The ability to sell goods and services over the
Internet. To enable your website to sell goods and services, you need
a merchant account (to process credit cards), a secure server for your
form, and (if you have more than one product) a shopping cart program
to "remember" what your customers want to purchase. If you
anticipate a large volume of purchases, you may need a separate company
to provide real-time processing of your credit card transactions.
.edu: Suffix indicating an educational domain.
Email: Electronic mail. A wonderful, free marketing tool and
a great way to keep in touch with friends, family, business associates,
and website visitors. If you don't have an email address, what are you
waiting for? Your Internet service provider should give you one, your
web host should give you one if you have your own domain, and you can
get them for free on the World Wide Web or by using Juno.
Email address: The first part of an email address is the username,
which identifies the person you want to contact. The @ symbol is after
the username, and before the host name. The host name identifies the
computer or email service the person uses. A three-letter suffix is
added (separated with a dot) after the host name. The most common suffixes
are: .com (commercial), .net (network), .org (non-profit organization),
.edu (educational), .gov (government), and .mil (military). Any two
letter suffixes after the three letter suffix identify a country: .us
(United States), .uk (United Kingdom), .de (Germany), .ca (Canada),
.se (Sweden), etc. The host name and country suffix are unnecessary
if your information is the same. (If you use AT&T Worldcom and so
does your best friend, you can address email to just her username, and
if you live in the United States, you'll never see a .us suffix.)
Encryption: A program that scrambles and unscrambles data on
a network, so personal information located there is unintelligible to
unauthorized people. Even if a website's form data is encrypted, if
it is sent via email it becomes accessible to anyone. If you are setting
up E-Commerce on your website, be sure to store your customers' data
on a secure server.
Ethernet: The most common method of networking computers in
a local area network, since it can be used with any kind of computer.
It also provides fast connections and (if the network has a direct connection
to the internet), can provide fast and constant connections to the Internet.
Most University of California campuses now offer Ethernet connections
to their students in the dorms for free - all they need is an Ethernet
card in their computer!
Extended product: A product that is added to in come way. An example
would be a Big Mac Value Meal (burger, fries and a soda rather than
just a burger).
Ezine: An electronic magazine, often sent via email and/or
posted on a website. These "magazines" are usually short,
and are often free. I strongly suggest signing up for free ezines in
your field and starting one of your own as marketing tools. Signing
up for your competitor's ezine helps you keep up to date with what they're
doing, and can give you ideas for your website.
F
FAQ: Internet abbreviation of "frequently asked questions."
Flame: To send an angry or malicious comment to a newsgroup,
chat room, bulletin board, or via email. Doing so is considered bad;
so if an online comment makes you angry, don't send your response until
you've cooled down a bit! Derived words include: flaming, flamer, and
flame war (which is basically a nasty online argument).
Forms: A set of HTML commands which allows the author to control
information sent to them by visitors. Forms can make it easier for visitors
to give feedback because the author does all the work. All the visitor
has to do is answer the author's questions. (Other times, forms aren't
any easier to fill out than an email screen, and the tiny input areas
make it more frustrating.)
FTP: "File Transfer Protocol." This computer language
allows you to get files from and send files to any type of computer
over the Internet. Under most circumstances, your browser works very
well for transferring files between computers, but when you have your
own website, it's helpful to have a specialized program to update it.
FYI: Internet abbreviation for "for your information."
G
G: Email and newsgroup abbreviation for a grin.
Generic product: A product which is the same for all competitors.
An example would be a hamburger (small bun, ketchup, mustard, two pickles
and a tiny patty - every fast food joint offers one).
Gif: A type of graphic understood by all graphic browsers.
They were introduced by CompuServe back when graphic browsers were young.
Now, they are the most flexible graphic format, allowing transparent
backgrounds and animation.
Gopher: A menu-driven interface for the Internet. This system
is now obsolete; it was almost entirely replaced by the World Wide Web
four years ago, when I first encountered it.
.gov: A suffix indicating a government domain.
GUI: Graphical User Interface. A program that uses icons rather
than commands. Windows uses GUI; Unix and DOS use command-line interfaces.
H
Hallway pages: Most search engines which scour the Internet
for new WebPages to add to their database give better rankings to pages
they "found" than pages that were submitted on the "Add
URL" page. Hallway pages are basically a list of links to all the
pages in a website that the designer wants indexed by search engines.
By submitting the Hallway page, rather than the index page, the website
is likely to be indexed faster, more completely, and get better rankings.
Hidden input tags: Form tags which visitors will not see when
visiting your site. Some search engines index them. For example: <input
type="hidden" name="Description" value="Your
page description here.">
Hits: Hits are simply requests for files from visitors. Each
HTML document and graphic file counts as a separate hit, so they aren't
an accurate representation of the number of different visitors to your
site, but sometimes they're all you've got.
Home page: The main or entrance page to a website. The page
visitors are sent to when they type in your URL without adding a specific
page name. Home pages are usually named index.html, home.html, or default.html.
(I recommend index.html, since all hosts support that name.)
Host: Your Internet service provider host is the computer you
connect to for Internet access. Your website host is the computer where
your website files are located, which allows visitors access from the
Internet.
HTML: "Hypertext Markup Language." HTML is a simple
programming language everyone uses to author his or her webpage. (Programs
which claim to avoid the necessity of learning it translate your document
into HTML.)
Http: Hypertext transport protocol. The language used to move
web pages across the World Wide Web.
Hypertext: A term used to describe associative writing, as
opposed to linear (narrative) writing. People follow links in the text
to read it their way, rather than how the author wrote it. Web pages
are hypertext, and so are many CD-ROMs and computerized help systems.
I
IMHO: Email and newsgroup abbreviation of "in my humble
opinion." IMO & IMNSHO are variations that aren't humble.
Iming: Instant Messaging, or chatting on-line.
Insertion order (IO): The contract between an ad buyer and
the ad seller.
.int: A suffix indicating an international domain. (I've never
seen it, but Web Trends assures me it exists.)
Interstitial: A web advertisement that appears on its own page.
They aren't clickable, so they've lost popularity since introduced.
When a visitor clicked on a link, the ad would appear briefly before
the page they wanted.
IO: Insertion Order. It is a binding contract on one piece
of paper that outlines the ad sale you are making. It must be signed
by your ad client.
IOW: Email and newsgroup abbreviation of "in other words."
IP address: The Internet protocol address identifying a computer
connected to the Internet. Every computer (including yours) is assigned
one when they log onto the Internet. Servers always use the same IP
address, but if you get Internet access through a large dial-up Internet
service provider, you may be assigned a new IP address every time you
log on to the Internet.
IRC: Internet Relay Chat. A system, which lets you join real-time
text conversations over the Internet.
ISDN: Integrated Services Digital Network. A digital alternative
to phone lines for connecting to the Internet. Like DSL, it's faster
than analog modems, more expensive, and allows you to talk on the phone
and be on the Internet at the same time without additional phone lines.
I think DSL made ISDN obsolete by being faster and cheaper.
IRL: Chat and newsgroup abbreviation of "in real life."
ISP: Internet Service Provider. These are the companies who
supply Internet access to people who don't have their own servers. It
is best to find one, which is fast, reliable, and inexpensive. If you
travel often, choose a national provider whom you can access from anywhere
you're likely to go. If you are overwhelmed by choices, ask your friends
if they like their service or visit a website which compares the services
in your area.
J
Java: An object-oriented programming language developed by
Sun Microsystems. It's smaller and more versatile than C++, the popular
programming language it's based on. It's useful for programming web
applications, because it will run on any computer platform - Macintosh,
UNIX, Windows, or DOS.
JavaScript: A scripting language developed by Netscape and
Sun Microsystems that is loosely related to Java. JavaScript code can
be included in a webpage along with HTML and is easier to write than
Java. It is not a true programming language, though, and has limited
functionality. In order for visitors to see the JavaScript on your site,
they must have a browser that supports it, such as Netscape.
JK: Email and newsgroup abbreviation of "just kidding."
JPEG: Joint Photographic Experts Group (also JPG). A graphic
file format, which stores images in a compressed form. They aren't as
small or versatile as GIFs, but they offer better resolution, and are
especially useful for photographs you want to display on the web or
send via email.
K
Kbps: Kilobits per second - the standard measurement of modem
speed.
Key phrases: Phrases you want associated with your website in search
engines. Most people search for combinations of words rather than single
words, and writing your list of keywords grouped into phrases can give
you a search advantage.
Keywords: The words which best characterize your business and
website. If you include them in the text of your website, search engines
will associate them with your site, and return your site in searches
for them.
Keyword weight: The number of a particular keyword in your
document divided by the total number of words. Calculate it by copying
the text of your website into your favorite word processor. Count the
words, and count the keywords by using the Find/Replace option. Replace
all your keywords with themselves, and the program will tell you how
many there were.
Knowbie: A person who understands the finer details of computer
networking.
Knowbie: An artificially intelligent computer program that
automates the search for information on the Internet.
KWIM: Chat room abbreviation for "Know what I mean?"
L
Listserv: The email server managing a discussion list.
LOL: Email and newsgroup abbreviation of "laugh out loud."
Log: The record your website server keeps of who visits you,
when, and which pages they visited. Make sure your website host makes
these available, and then check them. A log record can show you how
many pages each visitor is looking at, and differentiates requests for
pages from requests for graphics.
Lurk: To read messages in a newsgroup or chat area without
participating in the discussion.
M
Mail bomb: An email message sent with the intent to crash the
recipient's mail server or mail reader. On many systems, this can result
in the cancellation of the bomber's account. A person can unintentionally
crash their message recipient's mail server or mail reader by attaching
files that are too large or that are not supported by the recipient's
mail server. So, don't send files that require browser attachments,
and if you have to send a large file, you may want to zip it first!
Mail filter: A program that allows you to sort email before
viewing it using the subject, the sender's email address, or even information
in the body of the message. Eudora and Pegasus both have mail filtering
options.
Mailing list: A list of email addresses compiled under an alias
in an email program like Eudora. It allows you to send messages (like
newsletters or announcements) to the entire group of people without
using blind carbon copies (BCC:) or having every email address appear
on the recipients' copies.
Marquee: A horizontally scrolling text message. Usually done
with JavaScript.
Meta tag: An HTML tag which is not visible when the document
is viewed. It is placed within the head tag to tell search engines the
description you would like them to use in their database, and the keywords
you want your page associated with. See my article on Meta Tags.
MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions. The standard format
for sending non-text email attachments, like photos, sound, video, or
software.
Mirror sites: An exact copy of a website. They're often used for
overloaded web and FTP sites, when the server can't take it anymore.
.mil: A suffix indicating a military domain.
MLM: Multi-Level Marketing. These are the pyramid schemes your
teachers warned you about in school. They promise you'll make money
with almost no effort. Don't believe them, and don't advertise where
they do.
Modem: Modulator, Demodulator. A device either inside or connected
to your computer, which allows you to connect to the Internet.
MPEG: Motion Picture Experts Group. The standard format for digital
video and audio compression. (AKA MP3)
N
.net: A suffix indicating a network domain. (Often used as
an alternative to .com.)
Netiquette: Internet etiquette. The rules of behavior for interacting
with others over email, newsgroups, discussion lists, discussion boards,
and chats. This includes restraining yourself when you feel like writing
angry comments ("flaming") and sending unsolicited email or
posting blatant advertisements ("Spam").
Netizens: People who frequent the World Wide Web, newsgroups,
and discussion lists. They understand how everything works and what
all these words and abbreviations mean.
Newbie: A person just learning the ropes of the Internet.
News bots: Computer programs that customize portal sites with
the information you're most interested in and sends you customized email
with the latest updates depending on the way you answer a few questions.
They're the simplest bots.
O
Opt-in: The people subscribed to a mailing list have asked
to receive the information or advertising. (Double Op-In means the person
requesting information must confirm their desire to receive it by responding
to an email message after subscribing.)
Opt-out: The people subscribed to a mailing list have not asked
to receive the email (it's SPAM), but they have the option of removing
their name from the list if they wish. Removing your name from an Opt-Out
list often has the undesirable effect of getting your name and email
address on even more lists!
.org: A suffix indicating a non-profit organization domain.
P
Page views: A measure of the number of times an HTML file was
requested from the server. Unlike hits, image files aren't counted.
Unlike unique visitors or users, one person visiting the same page multiple
times may be counted.
PERL: Practical Extraction and Report Language. The most common
(and simple) language used on the Internet to add interactivity to a
website, such as the processing of form data.
Permission marketing: Using Opt-In lists to send advertising
material.
Pixels: A unit of picture measurement. One pixel is about the
size of a period (.) in 12-point font. Web banners and other graphics
are measured in pixels. A standard banner size would be 468 pixels long
and 60 pixels high (468 X 60). Monitor resolution is also measured in
pixels. Right now, the most popular monitors display 800 pixels wide
and 600 pixels high (800 X 600).
Platform: The operating system used to access the Internet. Windows
98 and 95 are the most popular, but when you're designing your website,
that doesn't mean you can ignore Macintosh, Sun, or Linux computers,
which are used by significant portions of the internet community (unless
your site's content is just for users of one particular platform, like
"Windows 98 Annoyances").
Portal: A website where visitors can find what they are looking
for. Generally, a search engine or directory. A "vertical portal"
specializes in one industry or target market. A "horizontal portal"
tries to have something for everyone, like Yahoo! or Looksmart.
Protocol: A set of rules for exchanging data over the Internet.
These rules allow computers with different operating systems to communicate
with each other.
Q
Query: The words or phrase visitors use to search a database,
such as a search engine.
R
Ranking: The placing your website gets when visitors conduct
a search for your keywords or keyword phrases using a search engine.
(The most "relevant" response would be the top ranking.)
Reach: The amount of different types of people who see an ad
or message, including a website. Popularity.
Reciprocal link: A link you place on your webpage with the
understanding that the linked webpage will create a link to your site.
Referral page: A webpage which links to your website and sends
traffic. The URL will appear in your website's server logs, or in The
Counter's analysis of your traffic. A good referral page can be worth
more than a good search engine ranking, since it is likely to last longer.
ROI: Return on investment. A marketing term pointing out that
paying money to market yourself is worth it as long as you earn more
money from the advertisement than you spent on it. Make an effort to
measure your results from marketing efforts, so you can evaluate and
improve them.
ROS: Run Of Site. An advertising package involving many ads
on one website, where the website selling the space chooses where the
ads appear.
ROTFL: Chat and newsgroup abbreviation of "rolling on
the floor laughing."
S
Search bots: Computer programs which will search a dozen search
engines simultaneously. Used by Meta search engines like Dog pile.
Search engine: A cgi program, which allows a visitor to search
for words or phrases in a database of WebPages. The creator adds to
the database by sending a program called a "spider" to follow
links in WebPages.
Search engine algorithm: The criteria a search engine uses
to determine which websites match the words or phrases a visitor is
searching for.
Shopping bots: Computer programs that search commerce sites for the
best deal. Also called rob shoppers, they'll find you the best deal
on anything from cars to Palm Pilots.
Side door pages: Doorway Pages created to rank well on several
search engines for one or more keyword phrases. They provide valuable
content to the visitor, often in the form of an article.
Signature file: A small file you can create to add to the bottom
of your email and newsgroup messages. Most email programs will allow
you to create one fairly easily. For Netscape, create a file named .sig.txt
in the default folder on your hard drive. Add your address, phone numbers,
email address, URL, your company name, and/or a cute message. But keep
it to four lines or less.
Source code: The HTML and Java programming of a web document.
Look in your browser under View Source Code to look at a page's code.
If their page does something nifty you want to copy, cut and paste their
source code into a word processing program and save it.
SOV: Share Of Voice. How large a percent of a given niche or population
a web or email property reaches.
SPAM: Unsolicited email. This term encompasses everything from
those annoying jokes your friends send you to the multi-level marketing
schemes appearing in your email box every day.
Spamdexing: Gathering email addresses from the Internet to
create a database. The database of email addresses is then either used
to send unsolicited marketing messages or sold to somebody else for
that purpose.
Spider: A program, which follows links through websites to
add or update a database (usually for a search engine, but spandexes
have spiders too). They look at HTML code and add information their
search engines will use to determine the page's relevance to keywords
and phrases. They are text-based, and often can't follow frames.
Stemming: The ability of search engines to associate words
with prefixes and suffixes to their word stem. If you have "water"
on your website, the search engines with this ability will also associate
"watering" and "watered" with your page.
Stock bots: Computer programs that will find stocks meeting
your investment criteria. Consider them your completely impartial stock
broker. You can program them to find companies you want to invest in,
and alert you when a company's profile begins to drift away from your
criteria.
T
TAFN: Chat and newsgroup abbreviation of "That's all for
now." TTFN is the Tigger variation, "Ta-ta for now."
Tangible product: "Tangible" means you can touch
it. Most things we think of as "products" (such as Big Macs)
are physical. An intangible product would be a service.
Target audience: The people most likely to buy your product
or service, or most interested in the information you provide. The more
you know about them, and have designed your product or service with
them in mind, the easier it will be to sell it to them.
TCP/IP: Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A
language allowing different types of computers to communicate over a
network. It's how computers talk over the Internet, and sometimes even
Local Area Networks.
Telnet: A command-driven access to information on the Internet.
I recommend ignoring it unless your job requires you to use it or you
already understand it. Like gopher, it was around before the World Wide
Web, and is being replaced by simpler methods of accessing information.
THX: "Thanks."
TIA: Abbreviation for "Thanks in advance." I don't
recommend you use it with your business email responses!
TPTB: Abbreviation for "The Powers That Be."
TTYL: Chat abbreviation for "Talk to you later."
TLK2UL8R is a longer variation. They both mean exactly the same thing.
U
Unique URL tagging: The practice of embedding uniquely identifying
code into URLs in HTML content. This allows the website to identify
visitors and how often they visit.
URL: "Uniform Resource Locator." Your website's address.
(http://www.yoursite.com)
Usenet: The newsgroup portion of the Internet.
V
Visitor: One person coming to your website. They may access
one or many pages on your site, creating multiple hits. They may even
come back with a different address. Visitors are what everyone wants,
not hits. Count them carefully.
W
Watermark: A background image that doesn't scroll along with
the rest of the page.
Web host: A company, which keeps websites on their computers
for public access. If you are paying for a company to host your website,
make sure they provide redundant backups, fast and friendly support,
access to your logs, and cgi script access and support.
Webpage: One HTML document accessible form the World Wide Web.
One page on a website.
Website: A collection of WebPages linked together on a single topic
or for a single business accessible from the World Wide Web.
WFM: Internet abbreviation of "works for me."
WTG: Internet abbreviation of "way to go!"
WTGP? Chat abbreviation of "Want to go private?"
WTHYTA: Chat abbreviation for "What the heck you talking
about?"
WWW: World Wide Web, often called simply "the web."
The most popular method of finding information on the Internet. The
World Wide Web is a collection of documents linked by HTML.
WYSIWYG: Abbreviation of "What you see is what you get,"
often used in regards to HTML editors. With a WYSIWYG editor, you don't
have to learn HTML code in order to design your own website.
Z
Zip: Zipping a file compresses the information to make the
program smaller by actually deleting some common information. To use
a file that has been zipped, you must "unzip" it. Windows
98 can automatically unzip files, but for other operating systems you
may need to acquire a separate program in order to do so.