Chat room
Chat with our AI personalities
they communicate by contacting each other and asking for information to be sent to the browser from the server. the server holds the information they communicate by contacting each other and asking for information to be sent to the browser from the server. the server holds the information
Check your Internet connection Check any cables and reboot any routers, modems, or other network devices you may be using. Allow Chrome to access the network in your firewall or antivirus settings. If it is already listed as a program allowed to access the network, try removing it from the list and adding it again. If you use a proxy server… Check your proxy settings or contact your network administrator to make sure the proxy server is working. If you don’t believe you should be using a proxy server: Go to the Chrome menu > Settings > Show advanced settings… > Change proxy settings… > LAN Settings and deselect “Use a proxy server for your LAN”.
one is stupid and the other is @$#%&**&%$#@$#%&*
No - the internet library isn't necessarily better than a traditional library. Some reasons for this include:Not everything is available online - especially older information.A lot of information is under copyright, and is therefore not online.Not everything has been digitized.It can be harder to find the information.Information on the internet can be harder to vouch for in terms of accuracy - there's a lot more misinformation online compared to within a physical library.There can be issues with bandwidthIf the server is down or if your computer (or other internet-enabled device) fails, you will not have any access.It can be quite difficult to read things from a computer screen.Digital information is especially prone to corruption and loss, which can result in it becoming inaccessible.
The Internet, sometimes called simply "the Net," is a worldwide system of computer networks - a network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other computers).