i don’t know. this meme start with me wondering about should “www” present when i tell someone a web address name. i go directly with real world example, so i search what top 5 search engine today (as this is where people go first when forgot about web address…) to check whether they use www. 3 of them use www in their address (as showed in browser address bar), the other 2 with initial Y don’t
www really doesn’t matter and has nothing to do with the quality of a website. It used to be that servers would use the www subdomain so that they could be told apart from their mailservers (which would use smtp) and other servers they might have.
Nowadays this isn’t really needed. Most websites can be accessed with and without the www. The www is usually just used out of tradition and because it makes a domain look more like a web address for the masses.
www exists to differentiate between internal server/files (a file on your computer, direct network, etc) and external server/files (the world wide web).
Your system actually handles the “root” system for both the same. You might have noticed that webpage subpage are differentiated by a /. So are folders in your folders!
i don’t know. this meme start with me wondering about should “www” present when i tell someone a web address name. i go directly with real world example, so i search what top 5 search engine today (as this is where people go first when forgot about web address…) to check whether they use www. 3 of them use www in their address (as showed in browser address bar), the other 2 with initial Y don’t
www really doesn’t matter and has nothing to do with the quality of a website. It used to be that servers would use the www subdomain so that they could be told apart from their mailservers (which would use smtp) and other servers they might have.
Nowadays this isn’t really needed. Most websites can be accessed with and without the www. The www is usually just used out of tradition and because it makes a domain look more like a web address for the masses.
www exists to differentiate between internal server/files (a file on your computer, direct network, etc) and external server/files (the world wide web).
Your system actually handles the “root” system for both the same. You might have noticed that webpage subpage are differentiated by a /. So are folders in your folders!