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The World Wide Web is the most popular part of the Internet by far. Once
you spend time on the Web you'll feel that there is no limit
to what you can discover. The Web allows rich and diverse communication by enabling you to access and interact with text, graphics, animation, photos, audio and video.
So just what is this miraculous creation? On the simplest level, the Web physically consists of your personal computer or mobile device, web browser software, a connection to an Internet service provider, computers called servers that host digital data, and routers and switches that direct the flow of information. Let's say you want to access the Louvre museum website. First you enter the address or URL of the website in your web browser (more about this shortly). Then your browser requests all the data files that comprise the web page from the web server that hosts the Louvre's site. The server transmits the data over the Internet to your computer. Your web browser assembles and interprets the data, displaying it on your computer screen. The Louvre's website also has links to the sites of other museums, such as the Vatican Museum. If you click on that link, you will access the web server for the Vatican Museum. In this way, information scattered all across the globe is linked together. To access the Web you need a web browser, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Chrome or Safari. How does your web browser distinguish between web pages and other types of data on the Internet? Web pages are written in a computer language called Hypertext Markup Language or HTML.
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