What is the world wide web Twila Camp

The World Wide Web,

where you’re likely watching this video,

is used by millions of people every day

for everything from

checking the weather,

ordering food,

and chatting with friends

to raising funds,

sharing news,

or starting revolutions.

We use it from our computers, our phones, even our cars.

It’s just there,

all around us, all the time.

But what is it exactly?

Well first of all, the World Wide Web is not the Internet,

even though the terms are often used interchangeably.

The Internet is simply the way computers connect to each other

in order to share information.

When the Internet first emerged,

computers actually made direct calls to each other.

Today, networks are all around us,

so computers can communicate seamlessly.

The communication enabled through the Internet

has many uses,

such as email, file transfer, and conferencing.

But the most common use

is accessing the World Wide Web.

Think of the Web as a bunch of skyscrapers,

each representing a web server,

a computer always connected to the Internet,

specifically designed to store information and share it.

When someone starts a website,

they are renting a room in this skyscraper,

filling it with information

and linking that information together

in an organized way for others to access.

The people who own these skyscrapers

and rent space in them

are called web hosts,

but anyone can set up a web server

with the right equipment a bit of know-how.

There’s another part to having a website,

without which we would be lost in the city

with no way of finding what we need.

This is the website address,

which consists of domain names.

Just like with a real life address,

a website address lets you get where you want to go.

The information stored in the websites

is in web languages,

such as HTML and JavaScript.

When we find the website we’re looking for,

our web browser is able to take all the code on the site

and turn it into words, graphics, and videos.

We don’t need to know any special computer languages

because the web browser creates a graphic interface for us.

So, in a lot of ways,

the World Wide Web is a big virtual city

where we communicate with each other

in web languages,

with browsers acting as our translators.

And just like no one owns a city,

no one owns the Web;

it belongs to all of us.

Anyone can move in and set up shop.

We might have to pay an Internet service provider

to gain access,

a hosting company to rent web space,

or a registrar to reserve our web address.

Like utility companies in a city,

these companies provide crucial services,

but in the end,

not even they own the Web.

But what really makes the Web so special

lies in its very name.

Prior to the Web,

we used to consume most information

in a linear fashion.

In a book or newspaper article,

each sentence was read from beginning to end,

page by page,

in a straight line until you reached the end.

But that isn’t how our brains actually work.

Each of our thoughts is linked to other thoughts,

memories, and emotions

in a loose interconnected network, like a web.

Tim Berners-Lee, the father of the World Wide Web,

understood that we needed a way to organize information

that mirrored this natural arrangement.

And the Web accomplishes this through hyperlinks.

By linking several pages within a website

or even redirecting you to other websites

to expand on information or ideas immediately

as you encounter them,

hyperlinks allow the Web

to operate along the same lines as our thought patterns.

The Web is so much a part of our lives

because in content and structure,

it reflects both the wider society

and our individual minds.

And it connects those minds

across all boundaries,

not only enthnicity, gender, and age

but even time and space.

万维网

(您可能会在其中观看此视频)

每天被数百万人

用于从

查看天气、

订购食物、

与朋友聊天

到筹集资金、

分享新闻

或发起革命等各种活动。

我们在电脑、手机甚至汽车上使用它。

它就在那里,就

在我们身边,一直都在。

但它到底是什么?

首先,万维网不是互联网,

尽管这些术语经常互换使用。

互联网只是计算机相互连接

以共享信息的方式。

互联网刚出现时,

计算机实际上是直接相互调用的。

今天,网络无处不在,

因此计算机可以无缝通信。

通过 Internet 实现的通信

有许多用途,

例如电子邮件、文件传输和会议。

但最常见的用途

是访问万维网。

将 Web 想象成一堆摩天大楼,

每一个都代表一个 Web 服务器,

一台始终连接到 Internet 的计算机,

专门用于存储和共享信息。

当有人创建一个网站时,

他们会在这座摩天大楼中租用一个房间,在里面

填满信息,

并以有组织的方式将这些信息链接在一起

,以供其他人访问。

拥有这些摩天大楼

并在其中租用空间的人

被称为网络主机,

但任何人都可以

使用适当的设备设置网络服务器,并掌握一些专业知识。

拥有一个网站还有另一部分,

如果没有它,我们将迷失在城市

中,无法找到我们需要的东西。

这是网站地址

,由域名组成。

就像现实生活中的地址一样

,网站地址可以让您到达您想去的地方。

存储在网站中的信息

采用 Web 语言,

例如 HTML 和 JavaScript。

当我们找到我们正在寻找的网站时,

我们的网络浏览器能够获取网站上的所有代码

并将其转化为文字、图形和视频。

我们不需要知道任何特殊的计算机语言,

因为网络浏览器为我们创建了一个图形界面。

因此,在很多方面

,万维网是一个巨大的虚拟城市

,我们在其中使用网络语言相互交流

,浏览器充当我们的翻译器。

就像没有人拥有一座城市一样,

没有人拥有网络;

它属于我们所有人。

任何人都可以搬进来开店。

我们可能需要向 Internet 服务提供商付费

以获得访问权限,

向托管公司付费以租用 Web 空间,

或者向注册商付费以保留我们的 Web 地址。

就像城市中的公用事业公司一样,

这些公司提供重要的服务,

但最终,

它们甚至都没有拥有网络。

但真正让 Web 如此特别的原因

在于它的名字。

在 Web 出现之前,

我们曾经以线性方式消费大多数信息

在书籍或报纸文章中,

每个句子都是从头到尾

逐页阅读的,

一直沿直线阅读,直到读完为止。

但这并不是我们的大脑实际工作的方式。

我们的每一个想法都与其他想法、

记忆和情感

在一个松散的相互联系的网络中联系在一起,就像一张网。

万维网之父蒂姆·伯纳斯-李(Tim Berners-Lee)

明白我们需要一种方法来组织

反映这种自然排列的信息。

而网络通过超链接实现了这一点。

通过链接网站内的多个页面,

甚至将您重定向到其他网站

以在

您遇到它们时立即扩展信息或想法,

超链接允许网络

按照与我们的思维模式相同的方式运行。

网络是我们生活的一部分,

因为在内容和结构上,

它反映了更广泛的社会

和我们个人的思想。

它跨越所有界限将这些思想联系起来

不仅是民族、性别和年龄

,甚至是时间和空间。