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  2. Subdomain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subdomain

    Subdomains are also used by organizations that wish to assign a unique name to a particular department, function, or service related to the organization. For example, a university might assign "cs" to the computer science department, such that a number of hosts could be used inside that subdomain, such as www.cs.example.edu. [10]

  3. Domain name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name

    An example of an operational domain name with four levels of domain labels is sos.state.oh.us. 'sos' is said to be a sub-domain of 'state.oh.us', and 'state' a sub-domain of 'oh.us', etc. In general, subdomains are domains subordinate to their parent domain.

  4. Satellite emergency notification device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_emergency...

    The responding agency contacted depends, in part, on the location. Examples of responding agencies would be military Search and Rescue, Coast Guard, local police, voluntary Search and Rescue. Typical users/purchasers of these devices are participants in activities such as hiking, mountain biking, climbing, boating and flying.

  5. Public Suffix List - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Suffix_List

    In other words, a page at foo.example.co.uk might normally have access to cookies at bar.example.co.uk, but example.co.uk should be walled off from cookies at example2.co.uk, to prevent a same-site attack, since the latter two domains could be registered by different owners. Finding DMARC policy records for email subdomains.

  6. SOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOS

    SOS is a Morse code distress signal ( ), used internationally, originally established for maritime use.In formal notation SOS is written with an overscore line (SOS), to indicate that the Morse code equivalents for the individual letters of "SOS" are transmitted as an unbroken sequence of three dots / three dashes / three dots, with no spaces between the letters. [1]

  7. Fully qualified domain name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fully_qualified_domain_name

    Dot-separated fully qualified domain names are the primarily used form for human-readable representations of a domain name. Dot-separated domain names are not used in the internal representation of labels in a DNS message [7] but are used to reference domains in some TXT records and can appear in resolver configurations, system hosts files, and URLs.

  8. Sensor Observation Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensor_Observation_Service

    The Sensor Observation Service (SOS) is a web service to query real-time sensor data and sensor data time series and is part of the Sensor Web.The offered sensor data consists of data directly from the sensors, which are encoded in the Sensor Model Language (), and the measured values in the Observations and Measurements (O & M) encoding format.

  9. Country code top-level domain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Country_code_top-level_domain

    Individual ccTLDs may have varying requirements and fees for registering subdomains. There may be a local-presence requirement (for instance, citizenship or other connection to the ccTLD), as, for example, the American ( us ), Japanese ( jp ), Canadian ( ca ), French ( fr ) and German ( de ) domains, or registration may be open.