Hypertext - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hypertext is text, displayed on a computer, with references (hyperlinks) to other text that the reader can immediately access, usually by a mouse click or keypress sequence. Apart from running text, ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext
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Hypertext is text which is not constrained to be linear. Hypertext is text which contains links to other texts. The term was coined by Ted Nelson around 1965 (see History ). HyperMedia is a term used for hypertext which is not constrained t...
http://www.w3.org/WhatIs.html
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Hypertext Transfer Protocol - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hypertext Transfer Protocol ( HTTP ) is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. Its use for retrieving inter-linked resources, called hypertext...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol
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"...the primary source for serious hypertext" -- Robert Coover, The New York Times Book Review ... At Eastgate, we create new hypertext technologies and publish serious hypertext, fiction and non-fiction: serious, interactive writing.
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From the intricately woven epic of Victory Garden to the philosophical explorations of Socrates in the Labyrinth, Storyspace is the software of choice for serious hypertext -- on the Web, on disk, or on CD, for Macintosh or Windows.
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www.eastgate.com/Hypertext.html
www.eastgate.com/Hypertext.html
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Intro's to Hypertext ... Hypertext Theory ... Tim Berners-Lee (1995) Hypertext and Our Collective Destiny...
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carbon.ucdenver.edu/~mryder/itc_data/hypertext.html
carbon.ucdenver.edu/~mryder/itc_data/hypertext.html
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'An annotated bibliography of original hypertext fiction, criticism, and related sites. 'Exhaustive' according to the Wall Street Journal (March 28, 1996); a GNN Best of the Net Winner, 1995, for Literature. ... What I'm onto here is writing and researching and thinking about hypertext fiction. For those of you familiar with...
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www.duke.edu/~mshumate/hyperfic.html
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Cyberculture, Internet Literacy ... The World Wide Web (WWW) combines computer networking (the Internet) and Hypertext MarkUp Language (HTML) into an easy to use system by which people can access information around the world from a desktop computer.
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mason.gmu.edu/~montecin/hypertext.htm
mason.gmu.edu/~montecin/hypertext.htm
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