Webpages, blogs, and webinars; Built Your Presence in the Internet. Thursdays 3:00-4:30pm. Hyflex
This class is webpage and blog builders themed
You will learn:
How to build a website, how to do a blog, a chat, and webinar.
How to Add a Website to Your Social Media.
You will learn strategies to reach your favorite audience, engage people to your sites, and build loyalty.
There was the time when people needed a lot of software acumen to build web pages or to design a blog. Today all people have access to website builders. You will find how easy it is for you to build a website.
We will study 5 examples of the most popular websites builders.
You will build your own as a hands-on experience, or watch how it is done.
You will learn how to increase your communications on Social Media channels with your website and vice-versa.
You will learn the main strategies to build an audience, set a market place, and maintain your website, blog, or chat.
All devices are welcome. You have to know how to use your device (s) if you want the full experience. Yet, you will have a wonderful time just taking the class and learning the know-How of the most important tools of internet communications.
What is an example of a Web page and a website?
Since building a website is complex, it requires comparatively more time and knowledge to develop. Common examples of webpages are login page, sign up page, about page, contact page, privacy policy, sitemap, etc. Common examples of websites are Amazon.com, Quora.com, Wikipedia.org, Tutorialsmate.com, etc.
Is a webpage part of a website?
A website is a collection of linked web pages (plus their associated resources) that share a unique domain name. Each web page of a given website provides explicit links—most of the time in the form of clickable portions of text—that allow the user to move from one page of the website to another.
web page
A document which can be displayed in a web browser such as Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera, Microsoft Edge, or Apple Safari. These are also often called just “pages.”
website
A collection of web pages which are grouped together and usually connected together in various ways. Often called a “website” or a “site.”
web server
A computer that hosts a website on the Internet.search engine
A web service that helps you find other web pages, such as Google, Bing, Yahoo, or DuckDuckGo. Search engines are normally accessed through a web browser (e.g. you can perform search engine searches directly in the address bar of Firefox, Chrome, etc.) or through a web page. examples: Bing and duckduckgo
Let’s look at a simple analogy — a public library. This is what you would generally do when visiting a library:
- Find a search index and look for the title of the book you want.
- Make a note of the catalog number of the book.
- Go to the particular section containing the book, find the right catalog number, and get the book.
Let’s compare the library with a web server:
- The library is like a web server. It has several sections, which is similar to a web server hosting multiple websites.
- The different sections (science, math, history, etc.) in the library are like websites. Each section is like a unique website (two sections do not contain the same books).
- The books in each section are like webpages. One website may have several webpages, e.g., the Science section (the website) will have books on heat, sound, thermodynamics, statics, etc. (the webpages). Webpages can each be found at a unique location (URL).
- The search index is like the search engine. Each book has its own unique location in the library (two books cannot be kept at the same place) which is specified by the catalog number.
