The Web & Communication, DAT-ELZ
The development of the World Wide Web had a massive impact on the ways in which people interact and communicate, ultimately paving the way for the heavily interconnected world that we live in today. Although Internet communication dominates in many spheres of life, other means of communication remain no less important.
The Web & Communication Encyclopedia Articles By Title
database management system (DBMS), system for quick search and retrieval of information from a database. The DBMS......
Elmer Davis was a news broadcaster and writer, director of the U.S. Office of War Information during World War......
Edward Davy was a physician, chemist, and inventor who devised the electromagnetic repeater for relaying telegraphic......
George Geoffrey Dawson was an English journalist, editor of The Times from 1912 to 1919 and from 1923 until his......
Benjamin Henry Day was an American printer and journalist who founded the New York Sun, the first of the “penny”......
Stephen Day was the founder of the first printing press in England’s North American colonies. Day himself does......
dazibao, in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), prominently displayed handwritten posters containing complaints......
DC Comics, American media and entertainment company whose iconic comic-based properties represented some of the......
deep web, a part of the Internet that extends beyond the reach of search engines such as Google, Yahoo!, and Bing......
deepfake, synthetic media, including images, videos, and audio, generated by artificial intelligence (AI) technology......
DEISA, former European consortium (2002–11) of national supercomputer centres—partially funded by the European......
John Thaddeus Delane was the editor of The Times of London for 36 years. Delane, the second son of a distinguished......
Martin Delany was an African American abolitionist, physician, and editor in the pre-Civil War period; his espousal......
Floyd Dell was a novelist and radical journalist whose fiction examined the changing mores in sex and politics......
DENDRAL, an early expert system, developed beginning in 1965 by the artificial intelligence (AI) researcher Edward......
Robert H. Dennard was an American engineer credited with the invention of the one-transistor cell for dynamic random-access......
Joseph Dennie was an essayist and editor who was a major literary figure in the United States in the early 19th......
densitometer, device that measures the density, or the degree of darkening, of a photographic film or plate by......
Émile Deschamps was a poet prominent in the development of Romanticism. Deschamps’s literary debut came in 1818,......
desktop publishing, the use of a personal computer to perform publishing tasks that would otherwise require much......
detection, in electronics, the process of rectifying a radio wave and recovering any information superimposed on......
Diane di Prima was an American poet, one of the few women of the Beat movement to attain prominence. After attending......
Anton Diabelli was an Austrian music publisher and composer best known for his waltz, or Ländler, on which Ludwig......
Charles Dickens was an English novelist, generally considered the greatest of the Victorian era. His many volumes......
dictating machine, device for recording, storage, and subsequent reproduction (usually by typewriter or word-processing......
dictionary, reference book that lists words in order—usually, for Western languages, alphabetical—and gives their......
Denis Diderot was a French man of letters and philosopher who, from 1745 to 1772, served as chief editor of the......
Didot Family, family of French printers, publishers, and typefounders who had a profound influence on the history......
digital camera, device for making digital recordings of images. Texas Instruments Incorporated patented the first......
digital computer, any of a class of devices capable of solving problems by processing information in discrete form.......
digital sound recording, method of preserving sound in which audio signals are transformed into a series of pulses......
digital twin, virtual representation of a physical object, structure, or system that incorporates real-time data......
digital-to-analog conversion (DAC), Process by which digital signals (which have a binary state) are converted......
Richard Dimbleby was a pioneer radio news reporter and the first of Britain’s great broadcast journalists. He was......
Alioune Diop was a Senegalese politician, publisher, and founder of the newspaper Présence Africaine. French-educated......
Diophantus was a Greek mathematician, famous for his work in algebra. What little is known of Diophantus’s life......
diorama, three-dimensional exhibit, often miniature in scale, frequently housed in a cubicle and viewed through......
DirectX, a set of APIs (application programming interfaces) designed to handle multimedia tasks on Microsoft Corporation’s......
disability survey, collection of information about disability by using survey methods. Although disability statistics......
display resolution, number of pixels shown on a screen, expressed in the number of pixels across by the number......
distortion, in acoustics and electronics, any change in a signal that alters the basic waveform or the relationship......
distress signal, a method by which a ship at sea can summon assistance. Distress signals are fixed by custom and......
distributed computing, the coordinated use of many computers disbursed over a wide area to do complex tasks. Distributed......
DLL, file containing code for commonly used program functions on personal computers (PCs) that run the Microsoft......
DNA computing, the performing of computations using biological molecules, rather than traditional silicon chips.......
DNS, network service that converts between World Wide Web “name” addresses and numeric Internet addresses. The......
E.L. Doctorow was an American novelist known for his skillful manipulation of traditional genres. Doctorow graduated......
John V. Dodge was an American editor and publishing executive of the Encyclopædia Britannica. A graduate of Northwestern......
Mary Abigail Dodge was an American essayist and editor whose writings included works both of homely wit and in......
Mary Mapes Dodge was an American author of children’s books and the first editor of St. Nicholas magazine. As the......
Robert Dodsley was a British author, London bookseller, publisher, playwright, and editor who was influential in......
dollar sign, $, symbol that represents the dollar, the name of the standard monetary unit used in the United States,......
domain name, address of a computer, organization, or other entity on the Internet. Domain names are typically in......
The dot-com boom of 1995–2000 (and ultimate bust in 2001–2002) was a period of large, rapid, and ultimately unsustainable......
Frank Nelson Doubleday was an American publisher and founder of the book-publishing firm Doubleday & Company, Inc.......
Frederick Douglass was an African American abolitionist, orator, newspaper publisher, and author who is famous......
Charles Henry Dow was an American journalist who cofounded Dow Jones & Company, a financial news service, and The......
driver, computer program that acts as an intermediary between the operating system and a device such as a disk......
Matt Drudge is an American journalist who is best known for the Drudge Report, a conservative news and commentary......
dry offset, offset printing process combining the characteristics of letterpress and offset. A special plate prints......
dry plate, in photography, glass plate coated with a gelatin emulsion of silver bromide. It can be stored until......
DSL, networking technology that provides broadband (high-speed) Internet connections over conventional telephone......
W.E.B. Du Bois was an American sociologist, historian, author, editor, and activist who was the most important......
dubbing, in filmmaking, the process of adding new dialogue or other sounds to the sound track of a motion picture......
Élie Ducommun was a Swiss writer and editor who in 1902, with Charles-Albert Gobat, won the Nobel Prize for Peace.......
Louis Dudek was a Canadian poet noted for his development of the nonnarrative long poem. Educated at McGill University......
duplicating machine, a device for making duplicate copies from a master copy of printed, typed, drawn, or other......
Evert Augustus Duyckinck was an American biographer, editor, and critic who with such works as the two-volume Cyclopaedia......
DVD, type of optical disc used for data storage and as a platform for multimedia. Its most prominent commercial......
dye-transfer process, in photography, technique for preparing coloured photographic prints in which the colours......
Mathias Döpfner is a German businessman who served as chairman and CEO (2002– ) of Axel Springer SE, a German media......
Iva Toguri D’Aquino was a Japanese-American broadcaster from Japan to U.S. troops during World War II, who, after......
e-book, digital file containing a body of text and images suitable for distributing electronically and displaying......
e-commerce, maintaining relationships and conducting business transactions that include selling information, services,......
e-government, the use of information and communication technologies, particularly the Internet, in government.......
e-mail, messages transmitted and received by digital computers through a network. An e-mail system allows computer......
earphone, small loudspeaker held or worn close to the listener’s ear or within the outer ear. Common forms include......
Thomas East was a prominent English music publisher whose collection of psalms (1592) was among the first part-music......
Max Eastman was an American poet, editor, and prominent radical before and after World War I. Eastman was educated......
eBay is a global online auctions and trading company launched by American entrepreneur Pierre Omidyar in 1995.......
Echo, either of two experimental communications satellites launched into orbit around Earth by the National Aeronautics......
echocardiography, diagnostic technique that uses ultrasound (high-frequency sound waves) to produce an image of......
J. Presper Eckert was an American engineer and co-inventor of the first general-purpose electronic computer, a......
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), international organization founded in 1961 to stimulate......
Benjamin Edes was the founder and co-owner with John Gill of the New England newspaper, the Boston Gazette and......
Thomas Edison was an American inventor who, singly or jointly, held a world-record 1,093 patents. In addition,......
EDSAC, the first full-size stored-program computer, built at the University of Cambridge, Eng., by Maurice Wilkes......
Justus van Effen was a Dutch essayist and journalist whose straightforward didactic pieces, modelled on foreign......
Dave Eggers is an American author, publisher, and literacy advocate whose breakout memoir, A Heartbreaking Work......
eHarmony, American company providing online personal-relationship and matchmaking services. Founded in 2000 by......
Robert Eitner was a German musicologist, editor, and bibliographer. Largely self-taught in music, Eitner in 1853......
electrocardiography, method of graphic tracing (electrocardiogram; ECG or EKG) of the electric current generated......
electroencephalography, technique for recording and interpreting the electrical activity of the brain. The nerve......
electromyography, the graphing and study of the electrical characteristics of muscles. Resting muscle is normally......
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), nonprofit organization established to raise funds for lobbying, litigation,......
electronic records, evidence, in digital form, of transactions undertaken by individuals or by organizations. At......
electrophotography, any of several image-forming processes, principally xerography and the dielectric process,......
T.S. Eliot was an American-English poet, playwright, literary critic, and editor, a leader of the Modernist movement......
Larry Ellison is an American businessman and entrepreneur who was cofounder and chief executive officer (1977–2014)......
Elzevir Family, a family of Dutch booksellers, publishers, and printers, 15 members of which were in business between......