| DNS |
Domain Name System. The distributed name/address mechanism used in the Internet. A database system that translates an IP address into a domain name.
Ãâó: www.iarchive.com/_library/terminology/d.htm
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| DNS |
a general-purpose distributed, replicated, data query service chiefly used on Internet for translating hostnames into Internet addresses.
Ãâó: www.eos.ncsu.edu/guide/glossary.html
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| DNS |
Domain Name Service
Ãâó: www.psycom.net/iwar.2.html
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| DNS |
This is a server that matches up the URL of a website (eg www.liv.ac.uk) with its proper numeric IP address - it translates www.liv.ac.uk into the unique numeric IP address (138.253.31.2). Whenever you request a web page the web browser must consult the domain name server to find out what the numeric translation of the URL is. This is necessary because computers only understand the numeric IP address, whereas we humans prefer to use meaningful and more memorable text.
Ãâó: www.liv.ac.uk/webteam/glossary/
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| DNS |
The Domain Name Service is one of the core Internet protocols and mechanisms. DNS is what translates human-readable names (eg "www.microsoft.com") into the binary IP addresses that are actually used to move data packets around on the Internet. Winsock uses DNS when you call the gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr() functions.
Ãâó: tangentsoft.net/wskfaq/glossary.html
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