Говорят, что ...

If you can access the Internet, you can access the World Wide Web regardless of whether you're running on a low-end PC, a fancy expensive graphics workstation, or a multimillion-dollar mainframe. You can be using a simple text-only modem connection, a small 14-inch black and white monitor or a 21-inch full-color super gamma-corrected graphics-accelerated display system.

Lynx ("links," get it?), originally developed by the University of Kansas and now by Foteos Macrides at the Worcester Foundation for Biological Research, is an excellent browser for text-only Internet connections such as dial-up UNIX accounts. It requires VT100 terminal emulation, which most terminal emulation programs should support. You can use arrow keys to select links in Web pages.

Because Lynx runs on systems that lack the ability to display graphics, viewing Web pages using Lynx gives you nothing but the text and the links. Designing pages that work equally well in Lynx and in graphical browsers is one of the more interesting challenges of Web page design.

Finally, you will not be able to view documents in color or view graphics online, but you usually can download them to your system and view them there.

Нажмите на левую стрелку (если это LYNX) и Вы вернетесь на предыдущую страницу. (BACK in NETSCAPE)