Bookmark
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A bookmark is a thin marker, commonly made from paper or leather, used to keep one's place in a printed work and so be able to return to it with ease at some time in the future.
This term is being reused in various modern software applications, such as word processors, and most notably, Internet.
Internet bookmarks
Favorites.PNG
Bookmarks are pointers – primarily to URLs – built-in to the various Internet web browsers. Bookmarks have been incorporated into almost every browser since the Mosaic browser and are normally stored on the software client. A folder metaphor may be used for organization. Various shareware utilities and server-side web utilities have been developed to better manage bookmarks, yet none has gained widespread acceptance.
The bookmarks within Internet Explorer, created by Microsoft, are called Favorites. By virtue of the large proportion of people using Internet Explorer, the term Favorite has become virtually synonymous with bookmark in this respect.
Also, in Mosaic web browser, bookmarks are called Hotlists (see this image (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Windows_Mosaic_3.0.png) for an example), though this term is not widespread, due to the limited popularity of Mosaic.
The most recent development in internet bookmarks was the introduction of live bookmarks by Mozilla Firefox in 2004. Utilizing RSS feeds, live bookmarks sit in the bookmarks menu or sidebar like any other, but contain a regularly updated list of links to recent articles supplied by a news site or weblog.
Lbookmarks.jpg
See also
External links
- Bookmark Managers (http://dmoz.org/Computers/Internet/On_the_Web/Web_Applications/Bookmark_Managers/) at the Open Directory Project
- The World of Bookmarks and The Art of Bookmark presented by Mirage Bookmark (http://www.miragebookmark.ch/)
- In My Book...the greeting card and bookmark in one (http://www.inmybook.com/)de:Lesezeichen (Internet)