Internet Definition–noun | a vast computer network linking smaller computer networks worldwide (usually prec. by the). The Internet includes commercial, educational, governmental, and other networks, all of which use the same set of communications protocols. | | From Dictionary
Provider Definition–noun | 1. | a person or thing that provides. | | 2. | a person who supports a family or another person. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaComputers and Information Systems Dial-up Internet customers continued to shift to broadband service for faster Internet connections. The entry-level broadband service offered by telephone and cable television companies cost as ...
Computers and Information Systems Despite growing demand for high-speed Internet service, the declining economy effectively reduced the number of competitors, and the DSL service was left largely in the hands of the former regional ...
Computers and Information Systems It was the year of the Internet's World Wide Web, which by the end of 1996 had so permeated the public's consciousness that even nontechnical adults were likely to speak of the "Net" and the "Web." ...
Computers and Information Systems The adoption rate for broadband Internet access-primarily cable modem and digital subscriber line (DSL)-slowed, largely as a result of the depressed economy. A study by PricewaterhouseCoopers in June ...
Computers and Information Systems In 2005 the United States insisted that it would indefinitely retain control of a group of Internet "root servers," which acted as traffic directors for PCs navigating the Web. The move was a ...
Computers and Information Systems On-line use continued to grow in popularity throughout 1998. An IDC survey predicted that 23% of all U.S. households would be using an on-line service provider by the end of the year. The prediction ...
Computers and Information Systems As use of the Internet continued its rapid growth, privacy and security became major concerns in 2000. There were changes in the demographics of people who used the Internet and new studies about the ...
Computers and Information Systems Sales of personal music players were bound up in the battle for supremacy in online music purchases. Apple Computer, Inc., found itself embroiled in a dispute with RealNetworks, Inc., which decided ...
Computers and Information Systems Social networking Web sites continued to gain in popularity to the point that e-marketers sought to capitalize on them. (See Sidebar.) Popular social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook ...
Computers and Information Systems Wireless computer networks grew in popularity as more coffee shops, hotels, restaurants, and airports offered "hot spots" (very localized signal-coverage areas) based on a technology called Wi-Fi ...
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