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Web Reaches 100 Million Sites

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Web Reaches 100 Million Sites

Web reaches new milestone: 100 million sites

Include your Group Number; Course Number for the course in which you are enrolled.

Robert Reingruber

University of Phoenix

BSIT1.04-24; WEB 420

Chuck Bryne

April 29, 2007

Web reaches new milestone: 100 million sites

Indent the first line of each paragraph. Use the tab key, which should be set at five to seven spaces, or Ѕ inch. See APA, p. 289.

Quotations: All short quotes require a page number or paragraph symbol if no page number is available. See APA p. 292.

I found this article to be quite interesting. We all know there is a lot of websites out there, but 100 million is a tough number to imagine. It is really amazing that after taking until 2004 to reach 50 million it only took a little over 2 years to reach double that. [statements of facts here. Who said it reach 50 million two years, why not 15 million in 20 years? You need a citation reference here.] I guess I would be a little bit late in the game to make the conclusion that the internet is here to stay.

There is such an abundance of information and the internet has become such an integral part of our lives in just a few short years. Right now I find it fascinating that when I think about how I bought my first house in 1996 compared to the process of buying my second home just last year. I didn’t [Avoid the use of contractions in formal writing (e.g., Don't = do not)] even use the internet for any part of the process the first time around. I looked up a realtor in the phone book and I got all the information on listings from here. She gave me some documentation on different mortgage brokers and all of the homes we looked for were ones that she had picked out for us to see based on our criteria. This time around I had most of these things complete by the time I had even selected a relator (which I did online). There are several tools online that let you complete much of the home buying process yourself with little to no experience in real estate. Even if you know nothing about real estate at all you can learn everything you need to know online.

The first thing I did was find a neighborhood I wanted to live in. This was merely a matter of checking out mapquest and finding the areas that were within the radius I wanted to be from certain other key points on interest, such as my office and where my kids live. Then I was able to check out other key statistics such as crime rates and how the schools rate. I found my mortgage broker online by searching some of the sites that have interest rates posted and updated daily. Once I did find a relator I think I updated her on homes that were becoming available in the area sooner than she was able to update me. I was able to find the exact location of the home, pictures of the exterior and interior, and what the yearly taxes would be. If everything looked like something I might be interested in I could just send her an email when I would like to see it and she would set it up. It is so helpful having all of this information in front of you on the computer. I did an extensive search that lasted about a month before I bought this house last year. To do the same amount of research without using the internet I would have been homeless for several months before I found the right place.

Of course real estate is only one of the things that has been made easier for us to research before we go into a final decision. Researching is also only part of what we are able to do. The ability to make actual purchases from almost any retailer to items that used to be restricted to yard sales can now be found on ebay from all over the world to larger items such as cars.

Researching and purchasing are still only a couple of examples and only a couple of the many things and out there on the “100 million” sites available to us at the click of a mouse. It amazes me on how many sites that have come up in recent years that have made the internet a social gathering place. It’s [Avoid the use of contractions in formal writing (e.g., Don't = do not)] no wonder that the Time Magazine person of the year is YOU. (Grossman, 2006) It seems like just yesterday you were really cool just to have an email address. Now everyone has at least one, and most of us several as well as a myspace page, a photo page on a site such as flickr, webshots, or on one of the many,

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