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Diabetes and the World Wide Web

Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics, 2005
The World Wide Web has become remarkably quickly an alternative source of information for patients and their relatives, as well as students and health-care professionals. A whole plethora of websites and Internet-based applications related to diabetes have appeared in recent years.
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Genetics on the World Wide Web

AACN Clinical Issues: Advanced Practice in Acute and Critical Care, 1998
Since 1990, when the Human Genome Project was initiated, the amount of genetic information on the World Wide Web (WWW) has grown substantially. The WWW has become an important resource for current, accurate, and reliable genetic information for health care professionals and the general public.
P A, Trangenstein, C, Hetteberg
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Dermatology and the World Wide Web

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1999
The WWW has an almost unlimited amount of information stored and available to users. There is already much information pertaining to the specialty of dermatology but relatively little information specific to veterinary dermatology. The amount of information placed on the web continues to increase, so familiarity with the web is a necessity in today's ...
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The World Wide Web

IEEE Potentials, 1998
After a brief discussion of what the World Wide Web is the authors go on to discuss: client server architecture, hypertext transfer protocol and setting up a Web server.
J. Vass   +3 more
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World Wide Web

ACM SIGUCCS Newsletter, 1995
With the term information superhighway being bandied about as the latest political buzzword and the newest computing cliche, people who search for information electronically have to wonder if the global network of networks known as the Internet is the realization of this newest technological legend or just a precursor better relegated to ...
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The World Wide Web

2016
The Web has become an integral part of our lives and has revolutionized just about everything we do. In this chapter we present a brief historical overview of the evolution of the Web. After introducing important concepts and terminology, we discuss how we have transitioned from being consumers to also becoming producers of Web available content.
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Neurobiologists and the World Wide Web

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1996
C R, Kowalczyk, J F, Burke
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The World Wide Web

Academic Psychiatry, 1997
T, Kramer, R S, Kennedy
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The AJC and the World Wide Web

The American Journal of Cardiology, 2009
Vincent E, Friedewald   +1 more
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The World‐Wide Web

Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology, 1995
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