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Post by stealth3si on Jun 25, 2011 23:08:56 GMT -5
They usually have a shipping department that notifies each other.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Jun 26, 2011 10:07:21 GMT -5
They usually have a shipping department that notifies each other. To the member I am quoting when you said what you said in the quoting I am quoting from you than are you saying that a shipping department of a company that sells products on a website notifies the owner(s) of that website when products have been purchased from their website. If I am right on what I said in this paragraph of this post than is the same thing I said in this paragraph of this post how free sample requests from a website are done. If I am right on what I said in the previous paragraph of this post than how is a third party notified that a product they want to sell on lets say Ebay or Amazon got bought so that the person who bought the product can have that product mailed to the person.
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Post by stealth3si on Jun 26, 2011 23:13:26 GMT -5
The operations are all basically done through their internal departments.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Jun 30, 2011 12:03:26 GMT -5
I was wondering if anyone who reads this post knows why some website URLs show the following as part of the website URL.
What I have seen in many website URLs is after a / it will have a word after it. Such as for the SquishyCash forum URL after the / it says forum.
Is the reason why what I asked in the previous paragraph of this post happens is because if there was no / and the word forum than anyone who wanted to go to the homepage of the SquishyCash forum wouldn't end up going to the SquishyCash forum homepage, but instead go to the SquishyCash homepage instead.
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Post by stealth3si on Jun 30, 2011 23:51:01 GMT -5
The "/" would separate the words like directories within the domain.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Jul 1, 2011 15:00:59 GMT -5
The "/" would separate the words like directories within the domain. To the member I am quoting what did you mean by directories and domain. What is an example of a directory? What is an example of a domain? Is SquishyCash a domain.
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Post by stealth3si on Jul 1, 2011 23:26:17 GMT -5
A directory is like a folder.
An example of a domain is ".com" so "SquishyCash.com" is a domain.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Jul 2, 2011 12:49:56 GMT -5
A directory is like a folder. An example of a domain is ".com" so "SquishyCash.com" is a domain. To the OP I am quoting how is a directory like a folder. When you said folder when relating to websites are you saying that each link on a website is like a folder? If I am wrong on what you meant by folder than let me know this. To the OP I am quoting or to anyone who reads this post how is .com a domain. Is .net and .org domains as well.
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Post by stealth3si on Jul 2, 2011 23:00:34 GMT -5
You are sort of right on what I previously said, on both counts, especially the second.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Jul 30, 2011 22:25:34 GMT -5
I was wondering if anyone who reads this post knows how a website such as yahoo.com is able to have news articles added to the homepage of yahoo.com lets say within 1 hour after something is worth sharing on the yahoo.com homepage.
Does the owner(s) who own yahoo.com hire one or more people to add news articles to yahoo.com and that is how news articles can be added to the yahoo.com website within 1 hour after something is worth sharing on the yahoo.com website?
If I am right on what I said in the 2nd paragraph of this post than is this the same way that a website such as msn.com and other websites that have news articles added to that website work.
How do news articles on yahoo.com that don't say anything about Yahoo is where the news article is from get received so someone who works for the yahoo.com website can add the news articles to the yahoo.com website?
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Post by stealth3si on Jul 30, 2011 23:41:43 GMT -5
1. Really fast working people. 2. Have you asked the owner of Yahoo.com?
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Post by sibtain on Jul 31, 2011 13:26:16 GMT -5
To the member I am quoting what did you mean by vague. To the member I am quoting why can a browser cause a freeze up or the whole computer could cause a freeze up when I try to go to a website. I forgot to mention in the first post of this thread that sometimes the only way for me to use the INTERNET after it freezes up on me is to restart the computer using the power button on a computer tower. I was wondering if anyone else has ever had to do what I said in this paragraph. Have you tried reinstalling the browser and installing a new browser?
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Post by sweetangel22 on Aug 12, 2011 9:03:31 GMT -5
I was wondering if anyone who reads this post knows why the following below shows up with website URLs.
I have noticed that many website URLs have a /, ?, =, numbers, etc as part of the website URL. I also noticed that one or more of what I mentioned seeing in website URLs in the previous sentance of this paragraph of this post shows one or more of those things in the same website URLs.
Is the / in website URL used to show what part of the website is going to shw up such as on SquishyCash if a member wants do an offer it could say /offers or something similar to this.
I was wondering what a ?, = and numbers are for in website URLs.
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Post by stealth3si on Aug 12, 2011 23:15:14 GMT -5
Those symbols are used for hypertext language.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Aug 13, 2011 8:45:55 GMT -5
Those symbols are used for hypertext language. To the member I am quoting why are the symbols I mentioned in the post I posted in this thread on Aug 12, 2011 used for hypertext language. Why did you say language in the quote I am quoting from you? To the member I am quoting is hypertext html and if I am right on this than why is html needed for websites to be able to be online. To anyone who reads this post I was wondering if hypertext is html than is html hard to learn.
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