Assuming you're talking about storing a backup of your computer files. This means any building other than the one the computer is stored in - whether that's at a friends home or a bank vault. This means - should the computer be stolen from wherever you use it - you will still have your data and programs up until the day of the last back-up before the machine was stolen.
The homophone that means location is "site" and "sight."
The homophone that means location is "site." "Cite" means to quote or refer to a source, and "sight" refers to the ability to see.
What does job site or job location means on a application
cite is to quote or refer to a passage of text whereas site is a location
No Browsing is just looking i.e. neither uploading nor downloading Uploading is puttings things from a computer on to a site Downloading is from a site to a computer
Site location is where the job is. If you deliver material to a construction site - that is site location ..................
the rootword loc means place or site. Examples: location, locate, and local
Website. The word "site" means "location". The word "sight" means vision. So a "website" is a location on the web, not a "websight", as it is sometimes misspelled, which would mean "vision on the web"!
It means "location", particularly as used in law, and frequently used when referring to a site for a concert.
It means Really Simple Investigations. In school science.
Its a compilation of 2 words, namely 'web' and 'sites'. Web refers to the internet, the so called web in which every computer is connected to each other. Sites refers to the state of something being somewhere, so there is a location on which something exists. The combination of the words is made due to the fact that a site that hold information is located on a computer that is in the web. Every computer can run its own site that displays information, etc. So the term 'Website' refers to the fact that the site (=location) is somewhere on a computer in the web (="internet").
In computer networks, failover support is a method for protecting availability of a computer resource. For failover support to work, a component must have a redundant or alternate and there must be an ability to detect the failure of the primary component and switch to the alternate. As an example, a company web site may be hosted at one location but have an alternate hosted at a different location. If the primary site goes down, traffic directed to the primary site is redirected to the alternate site in a manner that is transparent to the outside user.