Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Can I Optimize A Site Designed With Frames?
Can you optimize a site designed in frames? Of course you can! The question should be, "how effectively can I optimize a web sire designed in frames?" Framed sites – in my opinion – have little use in today's web design....

How to detect Search Engine Friendly Directories
Directories serve two purposes in your web development efforts. One, a link from a directory is counted as a back link and hence increases your link popularity. Two, some directories will send you targeted traffic. Webmasters...

Optimizing Pages with JavaScript and Style Sheets for Search Engines
Background Search Engines use a number of criteria to decide what a given web page is all about. These criteria, which can be different from Search Engine to Search Engine, and which may even change over time, all aim at deciding how "relevant" a...

Shopping Cart Usability
Shopping Cart Usability Usable Shopping Carts Increase Sales E-commerce has been around since 1993 under many different names, but one thing remains constant; shoppers want usable web sites. Without a usable shopping cart the sites typically fail...

What Is Behind All Those Web Traffic Reports?
Not all website statistical reports are created equal. Server activity analyses provide adequate measurements to assess the performance of your Internet presence, while real-time statistics offer more accurate data, like the exact number of...

 
Internet Basics: Browsers Are Like A Cake Pan

Ever make a cake? (If not, CLICK HERE to download one for FREE -- just joking.)

When you make a cake, you take some of this, and some of that, and even a bit of the other. Then you mix all the stuff up into a big goop in a bowl. Finally, when everything's in the mix, you pour it all into a cake pan where it gets cooked and shaped into the final product.

That's what browsers are like.

A browser, such as Internet Explorer or Netscape, is used to cook up and shape all the "stuff" it receives when you request a webpage. That stuff can include text, and tables, and images, and bits of information from a database, and Flash content, and Javascript actions, and a whole bunch of other things.

All the stuff sits on a computer called a server, and when you type in a certain domain name or webpage URL address into your browser, the server grabs all the stuff needed to assemble that webpage (that's like mixing all the ingredients into a bowl).

Then the server sends all the stuff to the browser (that's like pouring the cake mix into the cake pan).

The browser has the tough job of making sure the final product takes proper shape - this image here, that text there, this font, that size, this color, and so on.

And that's why browsers are like a cake pan.

Here's some FREE browsers you can download and use:

* Internet Explorer: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/downloads/default.mspx
* Netscape: http://www.netscape.com/
* Opera: http://www.opera.com/

Copyright (c) Grant Pasay 2005. All rights reserved.


About the Author: Grant Pasay is a writer, musician, moviemaker, and author of the new eBook, "The Internet Is Like A Refrigerator: And Other Weird Comparisons That Make it Easy to Understand Everything From AOL to Zip Files." Check out Grant's free/brandable ebook at: http://grantpasay.com/refrigerator/

Source: www.isnare.com

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.