It works fine. Check your parameters
Chrome is a web browser which works the client-server way. It receives data from client and gets it to the server and vice versa.
Google Chrome is a web browser made to work with Windows specially. It helps the various server side web pages to work with the client side ones.
An opera is a dramatic work to be sung with instrumental accompaniment, usually with scenery and in costume.Opera is also the name of the web browser and internet suite by Opera Software, which includes a web browser, email client, IRC client, BitTorrent client, etc.
For the internet; your web browser is the client and the web server is the server.
you can add RDP client as a published application in citrix ( either in program neighbourhood or Web interface ). It will work for sure...
If a client send a query requesting for a particular web page to the DNS server and if the DNS server resolves the page from the other DNS servers & it will be store the same page in the DNS cache and it will give the response to the client with the requested page. If again the same web page is requested by any client then DNS server will get the web page from the DNS cache instead of again fetching the same page from the internet. With this there wont be any delay for the client to get the web page. This helps in bandwidth control. This is how the DNS server caching works.
http://hackscape.org/client
web browser
client site program always execute on client computer while server site program execute on sever computer
Web testing is done to check the HTML code usage is correct,Website interactions are secure,Client Side - User side transactions work etc
Web service is basically a way of two devices, a client and a server, to communicate. The Client is basically the receiver of information from the server. To be honest, there wasn't much on the web on what exactly it is, but this is all I could piece together. Hope this helps.
A server will receive connections from a client, and the client will usually receive some service from the server. When you're browsing web sites online, those web sites are hosted on servers. Your web browser acts as a client to connect to the server and interact with it.