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Paper by Joe Touch, John Heidemann, and Katia Obraczka of the USC/Information Sciences Institute.
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Analysis of HTTP/1.1, identification of its failures, and suggestions for improvement. By Jeffrey C. Mogul of Compaq Research.
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Information and links on cookies from basic background information, to articles, technical specifications, and privacy issues from consumer groups. By Rajiv Shah.
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The purpose of the HTTP-NG Project is to tackle current HTTP deficiencies by using sound engineering practices.
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W3C working draft of an Extension Mechanism for HTTP.
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Despite the improvements made in version 1.1, HTTP/1.0 is still widely used around the Internet.
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This document tries to clarify the intentions of the specs for HTTP versions 1.0 and 1.1. The aim is to avoid confusion regarding the use and interpretation of each.
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HTTP/1.1 is the latest specification from the World Wide Web Consortium.
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Online tool for view a web pages HTML source code and HTTP server headers. See page redirections and cookies and other extra information.
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This is the overview materials related to the W3C HTTP activity, one of the W3C Architecture domain activities. HTTP has been in use by the World Wide Web since 1990 and its use has increased steadily over the years, mainly because it has proven useful as a generic middleware protocol.
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HTTP extensions to allow download of only the changes between cached and current versions of a page,