Web Hosting Glossary Terms starting with Letter G
Terms that will help you understand hosting services. Internet reference and glossary of Web Hosting Terms and Definitions. Please select a letter to jump to that section of The Glossary.
A glossary is defined as an alphabetical list of technical terms in some specialized field of knowledge; usually published as an appendix to a text on that field. This Web Hosting Glossary section is specially designed to explain most of the terms that you should read and understand before you choose your web hosting service provider.
Gateway
The technical meaning is a hardware or software set-up that translates between two dissimilar protocols, for example Prodigy has a gateway that translates between its internal, proprietary e-mail format and Internet e-mail format. Another, sloppier meaning of gateway is to describe any mechanism for providing access to another system, e.g. AOL might be called a gateway to the Internet.
Gateway PageA gateway page is a sub page of a website that caters to a specific audience; either by providing information addressing the needs of that audience, or by aggregating information by subject/topic.
GIF
(Graphics Interchange Format) A graphic file format invented by Compuserve. One of the most widely used formats for internet and web. Uses a lossless compression method, thus ensuring that the quality of the image is not lowered.
See also : ( JPEG )
Gigabyte (GB)
In data communications, a gigabyte is one billion bytes (1,073,741,824 bytes to be exact). Byte - a group of eight binary digits processed as a unit by a computer and used especially to represent an alphanumeric character.
See also: ( Megabyte , Terabyte )
Global Navigation
'Global' or 'persistent' navigation is navigation that is displayed on every webpage (usually at the top of the screen). This form of navigation typically provides access to the main content sections. In this way, top-level navigation is similar supermarket signage-it helps to orient the user.
Gophe Widely successful method of making menus of material available over the Internet. Gopher is a Client and Server style program, which requires that the user have a Gopher Client program. Although Gopher spread rapidly across the globe in only a couple of years, it has been largely supplanted by Hypertext, also known as WWW (World Wide Web) . There are still thousands of Gopher Servers on the Internet and we can expect they will remain for a while.
See also :( FTP )