Results 301 to 310 of about 1,590,112 (357)

Detección automatizada de colocaciones y otras unidades fraseológicas en un corpus electrónico

open access: yesLetras de Hoje, 2006
Bretaña, José Manuel Pazos   +1 more
doaj  

Hacia una geoprosodia de las lenguas íbero-romances en la chr(38)quot;webchr(38)quot;

open access: yesLetras de Hoje, 2006
Celdrán, Eugenio Martínez   +1 more
doaj  

An Introduction to the World Wide Web

Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, 1999
Background and Objectives. Anesthesiologists are increasingly utilizing the Internet for personal and professional purposes. Without guidance, the task of searching the Internet for information may be time-consuming and frustrating.
M P, Smith, J E, Tetzlaff, G J, Sheplock
openaire   +2 more sources

The Internet and the World Wide Web

Facial Plastic Surgery, 1999
The Internet offers easy, unrestricted access to an incredible volume of information. Once cumbersome methods of information retrieval and communication, the Internet and World Wide Web are now vital tools in medical practice. This article discusses current Internet technology and provides the basics necessary to incorporate this useful medium into ...
J D, Kriet, T D, Wang
openaire   +2 more sources

The world-wide web

Computer Networks and ISDN Systems, 1992
Abstract This paper describes the World-Wide Web (W3) global information system initiative, its protocols and data formats, and how it is used in practice. It discusses the plethora of different but similar information systems which exist, and how the web unifies them, creating a single information space.
openaire   +1 more source

The World-Wide Web

Communications of the ACM, 1994
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the history and growth of World Wide Web (W3). The World-Wide Web was developed to be a pool of human knowledge, which would allow collaborators in remote sites to share their ideas and all aspects of a common project.
Tim Berners-Lee   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Wide World of the World-Wide Web

International Journal of Legal Information, 1996
A prominent jurist once described the law as a “seamless web.” This description of linked knowledge actually applies to all fields of scholarship and investigation, and it is not only lawyers who experience the need to move through the library constantly, each open text citing another or suggesting another avenue of inquiry.
openaire   +1 more source

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