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Web Application Architecture


A little more than a decade ago at CERN (the scientific research laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland), Tim Berners-Lee presented a proposal for an information management system that would enable the sharing of knowledge and resources over a computer network.
The system he proposed has propagated itself into what can truly be called a World Wide Web, as people all over the world use it for a wide variety of purposes:
Educational institutions and research laboratories were among the very first users of the Web, employing it for sharing documents and other resources across the Internet.
Individuals today use the Web (and the underlying Internet technologies that sup- port it) as an instantaneous international postal service, as a worldwide community bulletin board for posting virtual photo albums, and as a venue for holding global yard sales.
Businesses engage in e-commerce, offering individuals a medium for buying and selling goods and services over the net. They also communicate with other busInesses through B2B (business-to-business) data exchanges, where companies can provide product catalogues, inventories, and sales records to other companies.
1st Edtion
0-471-48656-6
NONE
Web Application Architecture
Management
English
John Wiley & Sons Inc
2003
USA
1-374
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