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Yahoo! Kids was a public web portal provided by Yahoo! to find age-appropriate online content for children between the ages of 4 and 13. It was available in English and in Korean. The website is used for both educational and entertainment purposes. It was introduced in March 1996 by Yahoo! to give children a venue to find appropriate, safe ...
GeoCities, later Yahoo!GeoCities, was a web hosting service that allowed users to create and publish websites for free and to browse user-created websites by their theme or interest, active from 1994 to 2009.
Viaweb was a web-based application that allowed users to build and host their own online stores with little technical expertise using a web browser. [1] The company was started in July 1995 by Paul Graham, Robert Morris (using the pseudonym "John McArtyem"), [2] and Trevor Blackwell. [3] Graham claims Viaweb was the first application service ...
In TextTwist you get a set of letters and have to make as many words as you can with the letters provided. If typing text twisting words is your game, the new TextTwist Two could be the one for ...
Bix – A website that provided tools for the creation of contests; acquired by Yahoo on November 16, 2006, and shut down on June 30, 2009. [16] [17] blo.gs – A directory of blogs; acquired in June 2005 and sold to Automattic, parent of WordPress.com in April 2009. [18] [19] [20] Yahoo! Briefcase – A free file hosting service; shut down on ...
The YUI Library project at Yahoo! was founded by Thomas Sha and sponsored internally by Yahoo! co-founder Jerry Yang; its principal architects have been Sha, Adam Moore, and Matt Sweeney. The library's developers maintain the YUIBlog; the YUI community discusses the library and its implementations in its community forum.
The first website, manually written in HTML, was created on August 6, 1991. [1] [2] Over time, software was created to help design web pages. For example, Microsoft released FrontPage in November 1995.
Kiddle's domain was registered in 2014. The .co domain was chosen by the designers in order to emphasize the search engine's "children only" target audience. [3] Kiddle became very popular on social media in 2016, and even became a meme due to blocking of certain keywords for a short period of time.