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Web designers must take many considerations into account before developing a web site. One of those considerations is sometimes which type of web browser a user may be opening web pages with. Though not a major concern by most web design companies, it can be something that designers take note of prior to the creation process. In California, thousands of web-surfers access the internet every hour on a number of different web browsers. Most web firms have Internet Explorer in mind when developing web pages, as it is the most common web browser accessed due to its convenience. A web browser is a software application that allows a user to display and interact with text, images, videos, music and other information that is usually found on a Web page at a website on the World Wide Web or a local area network. Text and images on a Web page often provide hyperlinks to other Web pages at the same or different website. Web browsers enable users to quickly and comfortably connect to information provided on many Web pages at many websites by traveling through these links. Web browsers configure HTML information for display, so the appearance of a Web page may differ between browsers. The appearance of information on varying browsers is one of the issues that web design firms must take into effect when developing a new website. A few of the Web browsers available for personal computers are Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Safari, and Opera in order of descending popularity (in November 2007). Web browsers are the most common type of HTTP user agent. Although browsers are usually used to access the World Wide Web, they are also used to access information provided by Web servers in private networks or content in file systems. Web browsers communicate with Web servers usually using HTTP (hypertext transfer protocol) to retrieve web pages. HTTP allows Web browsers to sendinformation to Web servers as well as access Web pages from them. The most commonly used HTTP is HTTP/1.1, which is fully defined in RFC 2616. HTTP/1.1 has its own required standards that Internet Explorer does not fully support, but most other current-generation Web browsers do. Pages are located by means of a URL (uniform resource locator), which is treated as an address, beginning with http: for HTTP access. Many browsers also support a variety of other URL types and their corresponding protocols, such as gopher: for Gopher (a hierarchical hyperlinking protocol), ftp: for FTP (file transfer protocol), rtsp: for RTSP (real-time streaming protocol), and https: for HTTPS (an SSL encrypted version of HTTP).
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