A domain name is the text name corresponding to the numeric IP address of a computer on the Internet. A domain name must be unique. Internet users access your website using your domain name. download The process of copying files, information and images from the Internet to your computer. Every time a visitor accesses a page on the Internet, they are downloading the contents of that page.
www.simplenet.com.au/sbc_glossary.shtml
The "address" or URL of a particular Web site. This is also how you describe the name that is at the right of the @ sign in an Internet address. For example, netlingo.com is the domain name of this Internet dictionary. There is an organization called InterNIC that registers domain names for a small fee and keeps people from registering the same name. Most recently, more domain names will be allowed due to new suffixes coming out. These are:
www.netsetgo.com/glossary.php
The unique name that identifies an Internet site.
iaa2000.atalink.co.uk/html/glossary.htm
A domain name is a unique name, which used to be up to fifteen characters in length, but can now be up to sixty-seven characters, assigned to identify the domain on the network. A domain name must be different than all other domain names, workgroup names, and computer names on the network.
www.greencomputer.com/solutions/glossary.shtml
A series of words separated by dots (eg: microsoft.com) identifying an IP address.
webmaster.lycos.co.uk/glossary/D/
A domain name locates an organisation or other entity on the Internet. For example, the domain name www.totalcakes.com.au locates an Internet address for "totalcakes.com" at Internet point 199.0.0.2 and a particular host server named "www". The "com" part of the domain name reflects the purpose of the organisation or entity (in this example, "commercial") and is called the top-level domain name. ...
www.pacific.net.au/customer_support/glossary/
The unique name of an internet website. Datex.net is a domain name.
www.datex.net/ecommerce/glossary.htm
The unique name that identifies a Web site. Example: "Pfizer," in the Web address http://www.pfizer.com.
www.arthritis.com/privacy_policy_glossary.asp
The unique name that identifies an Internet site. Domain names have two or more parts separated by dots. For example www.kansasmedicare.com
www.kansasmedicare.com/part_B/edi/glossary.htm
This is the name registered by an organisation with the Name authorities that is then associated with a specific Internet address eg www.liv.ac.uk or www.amazon.co.uk. Domain names have to be registered to be valid and usable on the Internet. It can take a number of days before a new domain name becomes active. All Internet providers must update their DNS tables to record a new sites location. ...
www.liv.ac.uk/webteam/glossary/
In the Internet, a part of a naming hierarchy consisting of a sequence of names separated by periods (dots) that corresponds to the network number in the IP address. In the symbolic name john@videoconferencingbridging.com, the domain name is videoconferencingbridging.com.
www.ohsu.edu/vcs/glossary/
a unique name that identifies a web site
www.kudosweb.com/internet-glossary.cfm
Used in URLs to identify particular web pages or sites located on the Internet. For example, the domain name nces.ed.gov represents the web site for the National Center for Education Statistics.
nces.ed.gov/pubs2003/secureweb/glossary.asp
A name that is typically the first part of a URL and identifies the Web site. Example: www.yahoo.com. Domain names are used to make sites easier to remember.
webhostingrevealed.com/glossary.htm
A Domain Name is much like a trademark or a license. It allows people to find your website by name instead of by number. It also allows customers to have a much more professional look because their website can be http://www.THEIRBUSINESSNAME.com instead of http://www.PROVIDERNAME.com/businessname. There can only be one of any Domain name in the world. If http://www.myweb.com is already registered by another company, then you must find a name that is not yet registered. ...
www.pugmarks.com/support/glossary.htm
A name that identifies one or more IP addresses. For example, the domain name microsoft.com represents about a dozen IP addresses. Domain names are used in URLs to identify particular Web pages. For example, in the URL http://www.pcwebopedia.com/index.html, the domain name is pcwebopedia.com.
home.clevertech.net/help.asp
The text name corresponding to the numeric IP address of a computer on the Internet. For example, www.webtrends.com is a domain name.
www.fao.org/wwwstats/glossary.htm
A domain name is essentially a signpost on the Internet. Almost every website you've ever been to, and every email you've ever composed, has used a domain name in its address.
www.1stdomain.net/info/glossary.html
The unique name that identifies an Internet site. Domain Names always have 2 or more parts, separated by dots. The part on the left is the most specific, and the part on the right is the most general. A given machine may have more than one Domain Name but a given Domain Name points to only one machine. For example, the domain names:
www.unitedyellowpages.com/internet/terminology.html
Domain names are the human-readable addresses used on the Internet (eg, "www.microsoft.com"). The Domain Name Service translates these names into IP addresses which TCP/IP programs use directly. Compare dotted quad.
tangentsoft.net/wskfaq/glossary.html
A unique name that identifies one or more IP addresses. Domain names are used as addresses for Web pages and for sending email eg bized.ac.uk
www.bized.ac.uk/educators/16-19/business/marketing/lesson/sup_glossary.htm
The name of a computer on the Internet; the domain name service (DNS) converts domain names to IP addresses.
www.cs.cornell.edu/wya/DigLib/MS1999/glossary.html
The name of a computer or server on the Internet in the form of a string of names or numbers, separated by periods.
www.education-world.com/help/glossary.shtml
Unique address identifying each site on the Internet, usually of two or more segments separated by full stops.
www.devel.legend.co.uk/resources/gloss.html
A method of identifying computer addresses. Your e-mail address has a domain address. If you have an "edu" at the end of your e-mail address that means your account is affiliated with an educational institution. A "com" extension means you have a business account. A government account has a .gov suffix.
mason.gmu.edu/~montecin/netterms.htm
strings of letters and numbers (separated by periods) that are used to name organizations and computers and addresses on the internet; "domain names are organized hierarchically with the more generic parts to the right"
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
A domain name is the unique name of a computer on the Internet that distinguishes it from the other systems on the network. They are sometimes colloquially (and incorrectly) referred to by marketers as "web addresses".
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name
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