Net reaches a 100 million website mark
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Ashutosh , Chandigarh:
Nov 2 2006
Made Popular Nov 2 2006
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Yash
Nov 2 2006
Gwalior,
India
drastic change within 11 years is a big bang.... shows at what velocity technology is developing........ really awesome stats!!
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I would reckon the number is a little conservative if you took profile pages, subdomains, blogs etc. in 1992 there were about 50 websites with a little over 1,500 pages in all. It grew to about 50 million by 1999 with well over a billion pages.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
Local Opinions (2)
0 Stars
drastic change within 11 years is a big bang.... shows at what velocity technology is developing........ really awesome stats!!
0 Stars
I would reckon the number is a little conservative if you took profile pages, subdomains, blogs etc. in 1992 there were about 50 websites with a little over 1,500 pages in all. It grew to about 50 million by 1999 with well over a billion pages.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
Global Opinions (2)
0 Stars
drastic change within 11 years is a big bang.... shows at what velocity technology is developing........ really awesome stats!!
0 Stars
I would reckon the number is a little conservative if you took profile pages, subdomains, blogs etc. in 1992 there were about 50 websites with a little over 1,500 pages in all. It grew to about 50 million by 1999 with well over a billion pages.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
When the Web 1.0 bubble burst around 2000, there were almost as many websites as there are now with almost 10 billion web pages if not more.
In fact, after the first bubble, the rate of growth in the number of websites came down considerably and only picked up along with the advent of the Web 2.0 thingy.
I would like to know if profiles and websites hosted with social networks like hi5 and MySpace or the blogs hosted as sub-domains like in Wordpress or Blogger count as websites.
Such stats should be taken with a pinch of salt.
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