Yes
No. For a start, URLs are not only used for Web sites, but also for FTP sites and others.But not even all Web sites start with "www"; many have another prefix, or none at all. The use of "www" is just a convention, that is often followed.Look at WikiAnswers for a counterexample - the full URL is http://wiki.answers.com. "http://" is the protocol; but this is not followed by the common "www".
www
www stands for World Wide Web. www is not required in a web address and can be typed in an address bar like this: example.com Many people believe that www is require but is not and it is recognized by all browsers.
world wide web.. i learned that from my tech teacher way back when i was a kid
1914 to 1918
yes. metalium.org and www.metalium.org are not the same. especially for search engines However many well managed domains do send both to the same site.
HTTP is standard and mandatory in all Internet websites. It stands for HyperText Transfer Protocol.
Emails usually do not begin with www. Website URLs do.
I have tried many hosting services, but the best one for me is this ht tps://bit-ly .ru/Jw0bu Just remove the spaces in the link
The are all immortal and all had domains.
I'm not sure I understand your question.anything ahead of an actual domain (eg answers.com) is called the subdomain.www stands for world-wide web.so www is basically a publicly viewable area of a domain nameconversely there can be many sub-domains, (eg wiki.answers.com) tied to a real domain.Does this answer your question?
To align all the domains in a piece of iron, you can subject the iron to a magnetic field. As the iron is exposed to the magnetic field, the domains will gradually align in the direction of the field, resulting in the iron becoming magnetized.