Analysis of Task Assignment Policies in Scalable Distributed Web-Server Systems
IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
Design and Implementation of a Web-Based Bulletin System for Official Documents
COMPSAC '00 24th International Computer Software and Applications Conference
Experiences with an object-level scalable web framework
Journal of Network and Computer Applications
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The World Wide Web (WWW) has become, next to electronic mail, the most popular Internet application. It has been a major contributor in turning the Internet into a household word. The WWW allows users to retrieve text and multimedia objects from servers located throughout the world, with objects connected by hypermedia links. The author presents a snapshot of the WWW after about half a decade, and speculates about where this young medium might be improved and which directions it might take from a technical perspective. Like most (successful) Internet technologies, the underlying central functionality of the Web is rather simple: a naming mechanism for files (the universal resource locator, URL), a typed, stateless retrieval protocol (hypertext transfer protocol, HTTP), and a minimal formatting language with hyperlinks (hypertext markup language, HTML)