A place on the Internet or World Wide Web It refers to a body of information as a whole, for a particular domain name A Web site is a place made up of Web pages These pages can contain graphics, text, audio, video and other dynamic and static materials The word "site" can also refer to an FTP site or archive site, which is a directory on a computer somewhere (server) which has been set up to allow users to access by logging in and retrieving or uploading files to it
The site of an important event is the place where it happened. Scientists have described the Aral sea as the site of the worst ecological disaster on earth
As used in a Licensing Agreement, a site is a physical location affiliated with the Licensee where the Licensee may permit access to digital information to Authorized Users
The place where anything is fixed; situation; local position; as, the site of a city or of a house
a single musical instrument made of tower bells (a tower bell instrument), or a collection of such bells in one place Except in the case of great bells and three 6-bell rings in North America, all sites listed in these pages contain at least 8 bells If a new instrument replaced an older one in the same tower, both are included in the same site rather than being counted separately, even if there was a gap of many years between removal and replacement NOTE: In the context of the World Wide Web, the word "site" is often used to mean either (a) a host computer and all the Web pages resident on it, or (b) a home page and all the pages dependent from it on the same host In an attempt at clarity, we will not use meaning (a), and will use the composite word Website when meaning (b) is intended
Features of a place related to the immediate environment on which the place is located (e g , terrain, soil, subsurface, geology, ground water)
physical position in relation to the surroundings; "the sites are determined by highly specific sequences of nucleotides"
A location on the web containing HTML documents which can be used by viewers using a browser
The location of a web page on the Internet In WWW, it is called a website and identified by its URL
A web site (See WWW) This is a collection of web pages Unlike a book you are invited to browse web pages in a non-linear fashion by following links between pages according to your whim You access a site from its home page, which is usually the place you are taken by typing in the web address given in correspondence or advertisements The SCUDD home page, for example, is at http: //art ntu ac uk/scudd/ From this page there are links to other pages on the same site and to the sites created and administered by the various members of SCUDD (from which other links could lead you much further - hence ëwebÃ)
A computer installation, particularly one associated with an intranet or internet service or telecommunications
A place fitted or chosen for any certain permanent use or occupation; as, a site for a church
A place on the Internet Every web page has a location where it resides which is called its site
In Windows 2000, one or more reliable and fast TCP/IP subnets Setting up Windows 2000 sites allows you to configure Active Directory access and a replication topology to take advantage of the physical network
A place on the Internet Every web page has a location where it resides which is called it's site And, every site has an address, for example acornwebs co uk is the domain name of our site
A location where human activities once took place and left some form of material evidence A location which has yielded artifacts and either is, has, or will undergo excavation or is being conserved for the future Known sites should not be disturbed by amateurs or surface hunted Sites can be registered and can have a site number or code associated with them