Are there some design terms that you don't fully understand? This could be hindering you from fully understanding our quotes. So I've put together a mini glossary to aid you.
If you have any other terms I have not explained here then please contact me and I would gladly assist.
ACROBAT
Acrobat is another word for PDF file, but technically it is the program
you need to read/create PDF files (Adobe Acrobat reader/distiller)
APPLET
A program written in the Java programming language that can be included
in an HTML page, and can contain flashy effects or useful programming.
ASP
Active Server Pages. A specification that enables Web pages to be dynamically
created, or to access information from a database. The default language
for writing ASP pages is VBScript, but other languages can also be used.
BANDWIDTH
The amount of data that can be sent over a connection in a fixed amount
of time. Bandwidth is measured in bits per second (bps), kilobits per second
(kbps), or megabits per second (mps).
BLOG
Short for weblog, which is an online journal that is usually created for
public viewing. Some blogs are interactive, in that readers can comment
on entries within the blog.
BROWSER
The window that you view the website in. Can be powered by Internet Explorer,
Netscape Navigator, Firefox, Opera or Safari etc.
CGI
Common Gateway Interface. Server side program that allows for data to
be passed between web applications.
CONTENT
The pictures and copy (text) that make up a website.
COOKIES
Small files created by a programming/scripting language to hold information
like the times and dates you have visited websites or user and password
validation on member sections in websites.
CSS
Acronym for cascading style sheet An external document specifying things
like colour and font types that your website reads to get it's style attributes
from.
DHTML
Dynamic HTML. Refers to the use of a combination of HTML, CSS and JavaScript
to create small animations, effects and dynamic menus on a website.
DOWNLOAD & UPLOAD
Download is when you 'get' a file from another computer on the Internet.
Upload is when you 'give' a file to another computer on the Internet.
DNS
Domain Name Service is a system that translates domain names into IP numbers using a DNS server.
DOMAIN NAME
The address of your website (e.g. coza-web.co.za or google.com)
DPI / PPI
Dots Per Inch / Pixels Per Inch. The number of pixels within a square
inch. Used to determine whether a picture has high, medium or low resolution.
Pictures for web should have 72 ppi. Pictures to be printed on deskjet
printers should have 150 ppi. Pictures to be printed at Repro houses should
have 300 ppi.
EMAIL SPAM & SEARCH ENGINE SPAM
Most people are familiar with email spam, which is unsolicited mail that
keeps appearing in your mail box. In short...junk mail. Search engine spam
is when someone tries to deliberately trick a search engine into giving
their site better ranking than it deserves trough various methods like
hidden text on the page or submitting the site to the same engine more
than once a month. Sites caught spamming are penalised and ultimately removed.
FLASH
2D animation created in Macromedia Flash. Can have an swf extension for
websites or an exe extension for digital presentations. You will need a
flash player installed on your machine to view SWF files.
FORUM
An online discussion where readers can state their opinions and ask or
answer each others questions regarding a specific subject using online
forms.
FRAMES
Two or more HTML pages combined within a single browser screen. This allows
scrolling regions on different sections of a web page.
FTP
File Transfer Protocol. Downloading or uploading files from or to computers
using an FTP program or your internet browser in folder view. Usually you
will need a log in and password for the particular computer you want to
upload to or download from in order to this.
GIF
Graphic Interchange Format. A type of picture file usually with a small
file size. GIF files can be animated or stationery, transparent or opaque.
GIF files derive their size from the number of colours in the picture rather
than PPI.
HOST
The physical machine that the files that make up your website are located
on. This is a remote machine whose contents can be accessed via the TCP/IP
network. A host machine should always be on-line.
HTML
Hyper Text Markup Language. The language used for creating web pages.
HYPERLINK
An image (referred to as a hotspots) or text that link to another page
or within the same page (referred to as bookmarks)
IMAGE OPTIMISATION
The act of reducing the file size of a picture while still retaining an
acceptable amount of quality for the web.
IP ADDRESS
Internet Protocol Address. Every machine connected to the Internet has
a unique IP Address. This is one avenue that the authorities use to track
down hackers, although I believe there is software available to create
a dynamic (always changing) IP address.
JAVA
Besides being an Indonesian island south of Borneo that makes good coffee,
it is also programming language by Sun Microsystems used for writing Java
applets.
JAVASCRIPT
A scripting language that can be embedded in an HTML page or accessed
by an HTML page as an external document (.js) to create effects or useful
programming, such as form validation.
JPEG
Joint Photographic Experts Group. A type of picture file usually with
a small file size. JPEG files derive their size from the PPI (pixels per
inch).
KERNING
Horizontal spacing between letters of a word or sentence.
LEADING
Vertical spacing between lines of text in a paragraph/list.
MARQUEE
A small area of the browser window that can scroll or blink text at the
reader. Usually used for announcements and specials.
META DATA / TAG
Part of the backend (not visible to the viewer) of an HTML page providing
information about the page like the title, whether or not the data should
be cached and the description & keywords for search engine optimisation.
MOUSEOVER
The action of moving the mouse over a targeted area or link. This (like
mouseUp, mouseDown, onKeyPress, onChange etc.) can be used to trigger an
event using a script.
MYSQL
An open source relational database management system that uses SQL (structured
Query Language). Typically used in conjunction with PHP and run on Apache
server, but it can be run on IIS aswell.
ONE-WAY & RECIPROCAL LINKS
A one-way link is when a website links to your website and you don't link
back. Google regards one-way links as a measure of how useful your website
is and this can affect your ranking. This is the best kind, but also the
most difficult to get. So many sites have started offering reciprocal links
(you link to me & I'll link to you), as this will also affect your
ranking.
ORGANIC SEO
The art of search engine optimisation by obtaining one-way links from
other websites without actively submitting your site. This can be attained
by having useful and up to date content on your site, that people want
to link to.
PAGE RANK
Google Page Rank is an algorithm developed by Google to measure the quality
and number of links to a given page. Rank ranges from 0 (poor) to 10 (phenominal).
PERL
Practical Extracting and Reporting Language. A programming language often
used in conjunction with CGI. Somewhat like PHP, but more advanced.
PERMALINK
Permanent Link. A link that readers can use to bookmark a current blog
or forum post. This is sometimes necessary due to the dynamic nature of
blogs and forums.
PIXEL
The smallest part or single grid point of a raster image.
PNG
Portable Network Graphics. A type of picture file that can be transparent
or opaque. Often used within flash files because of it's superior compression.
PHP
The inventors of PHP are vague about what it stands for, but despite this,
many insist that it stands for Hypertext Preprocessor. An open source programming
language that enables Web pages to be dynamically created, or to access
information from a database. The most used and fastest growing of programming
languages and arguably the easiest to learn. Ususally used in conjunction
with MySQL.
POP-UPS
An advert or content that opens in a separate browser window to the one
that you are currently viewing.
PORTAL
A gateway website that is also a directory. It can contain a catalogue
of other sites, a search engine, free email and forums etc. Search Engines,
like Yahoo and most banks are portals.
PLUG-IN
Small applications that can be installed and used as an add-on feature
to your web browser, for example flash player and java software.
RASTER & VECTOR IMAGES
A raster image made up of pixels, for example a photograph. You can tell
an image is raster if you stretch it bigger, and it begins to distort.
A vector image is made up of paths (lines that link to form shapes), for
example clip art. Vector images do not distort if you enlarge them.
ROI
Acronym for Return On Income or Return On Invested Capital.
ROLLOVERS
Graphics that change when you move your mouse over them. For example,
a button that has an up state and an over state.
SCREEN RESOLUTION & REFRESH RATE
Your screen resolution is the size that your screen is set to. The default
was 800x600, but is moving towards 1024x768. Resolutions like 640x480 are
not really used anymore, but can be useful if your monitor is smaller than
a 15 inch monitor. Your refresh rate is the rate at which your monitor
picture refreshes. The default is usually too low (60 or 65) and can cause
headaches and eye strain. Set your refresh rate to at least 70!
SEO
Search Engine Optimisation. The job of optimising a website so that search
engine bots can crawl it without errors, and extract necessary meta data,
and keyword density to give a good ranking.
SERIF & SANS SERIF
Serifs are the short strokes that appear on the ends of some characters
of a typeface (font) like This. Sans serif means "without serif" and
refers to clean typefaces (fonts) like this.
SERP
Acronym for Search Engine Results Page
SITEMAPS & GOOGLE SITEMAPS
An ordinary sitemap is a page with links to all the pages within the website
laid out in a tree format. A Google sitemap is an XML document that lets
Google know what parts of your site are important.
TAG
Also known as Markup tags or HTML tags. Used in the backend code to define
parts of a web page so that it displays and formats correctly in the front
end.
URL
Uniform Resource Locator. The address of a webpage or file. Starts with
'http://' (hypertext transfer protocol) and usually, but not always has
'www' (world wide web) followed by a domain name and or folder name and
or page name, and ends with an extension like '.co.za' (South Africa) '.co.uk'
(Britain) '.com' (commerce) '.net' (network) '.biz' (business) '.org' (organisation,
usually non-profit) etc.
W3C
World Wide Web Consortium. A group of companies that set the international
standards for HTML and web.
WYSIWYG
What you see, is what you get.
XHTML
The language that is set to take over HTML 4.0. It is a hybrid between
HTML & XML, and is more strict than HTML.
XML
Extensible Markup Language. A language that allows users to create their own custom tags.
