No. HTTP is the 'protocol' is stands for Hypertext Transfer (or Transport) Protocol, and is one of the basic ways of transferring data on the web. Other common transfer protocols are ftp and https.
The part after the http:// , but ignoring individual page names, is the domain.
The first part to the URL is called protocol, which is http://. The second part is the domain name. It goes after the http://. http://www.dogs.com. So www.dog.com is the second part. The directory path is the third part. For example after .com would be, /about/. The file name is the fourth part. An example is after /about/index.HTML. So index.HTML is the fourth part. All together is would look like: http://www.dogs.com/about/index.HTML
The first part of the URL is called the 'domain', ie. wiki.answers.com or www.google.comUnless you are refering to the protocol part, which is the http:// or https://
the term used for the part of the e-mail address following the "@" symbol is "domain" for example in abcdefgh@yahoo.com "yahoo" would be the domain
The URL or uniform resources language is a link, or web address that describes a specific location on the web. It normally starts with http:// or https://A domain name is part of the url, it is the name of the domain where the URL hosted. I.e. which server or domain hosts the web address.For example. The URL to this question is:How_are_the_url_and_domain_name_the_sameThe domain name is:wiki.answers.com
There isn't really a name for it. The domain name technically includes the .com part.
The domain
The domain
A first level domain name is: www.firstlevel.com second level domain name is: www.second.firstlevel.com or: www.firstlevel.com/second
When the name of the website is used instead of the IP address, it is called a "domain name." Domain names serve as a user-friendly way to access websites, translating complex numeric IP addresses into easily memorable names. This system is part of the Domain Name System (DNS), which resolves domain names to their corresponding IP addresses for routing purposes.
Registering your domain name is very easy. Most Web hosts will help you do this when you create your website with them. The hardest part is deciding on a name for your domain.
When you type http://www.wiki.answers.com that is an URL, the first part "htpp://" identifies the protocol, used to fetch the webpage, and the second part www.wiki.answers.com points it's domain name.
False. The second part is the domain name, the first is an account identifier, nothing more.