The World Wide Web
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Figure 4.1: The relationship between the Web, the Internet, and a number
of common applications. (The particular geometric shapes are arbitrary.)
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Figure 4.2: The arrangement of Björn's bookmarks.
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Figure 4.3: A sample Web
biography page.
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Figure 4.4: A sample Web
business page.
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Figure 4.5: A sample Web guide.
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Figure 4.6: A sample Web tutorial.
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Figure 4.7: The dorm room used to illustrate the outlining process.
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Figure 4.8: The first cut at an outline that
describes how to clean a dorm
room.
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Figure 4.9: The second cut at an outline
that describes how to clean a
dorm room.
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Figure 4.10: A four-page circular Web presentation.
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Figure 4.11: A nine-page exploratory Web presentation.
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Figure 4.12: A thirteen-page hierarchical Web presentation.
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Figure 4.13: Web page rendered with a text-based browser.
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Figure 4.14: Web page rendered with a graphical-based browser.
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Figure 4.15: The result of mailing a Lynx-rendered document to
emhepp@aol.com.
© McGraw-Hill 1997.
All rights reserved.
This presentation accompanies the book "In-line/On-line:
Fundamentals of the Internet and World Wide Web" (ISBN 0-072-90685-5)
written by Raymond Greenlaw and Ellen Hepp.