Geek Library:
SEO: Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the visibility of a web site or a web page in search engines. As an Internet marketing strategy, SEO considers how search engines work and what people search for. Optimizing a website may involve editing its content and HTML and associated coding to increase its relevance to specific keywords.
Domain Name: Individual Internet host computers use domain names as host identifiers, or hostnames. An important purpose of domain names is to provide easily recognizable and memorizable names to numerically addressed Internet resources.
Flash: Adobe Flash is a multimedia platform used to add animation, video, and interactivity to Web pages. Flash provides animation of text, drawings, and still images. It supports bidirectional streaming of audio and video, and it can capture user input via mouse, keyboard, microphone, and camera. Flash contains an Object-oriented language called ActionScript.
HTML: (HyperText Markup Language) is the predominant markup language for web pages. It is written in the form of HTML elements consisting of "tags" surrounded by angle brackets within the web page content.
CSS: Is a style sheet language used to describe the presentation semantics (the look and formatting) of a document written in a markup language. Its most common application is to style web pages written in HTML and XHTML, but the language can also be applied to any kind of XML document. CSS is designed primarily to enable the separation of document content (written in HTML or a similar markup language) from document presentation. This separation can improve content accessibility, provide more flexibility and control in the specification of presentation characteristics, enable multiple pages to share formatting, and reduce complexity and repetition in the structural content (such as by allowing for tableless web design).
Blogs: A blog is a type of website or part of a website. Blogs are usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video. Entries are commonly displayed in reverse-chronological order. Most blogs are interactive, allowing visitors to leave comments and even message each other via widgets on the blogs and it is this interactivity that distinguishes them from other static websites.
Webmail: Is an email service intended to be primarily accessed via a web browser, as opposed to through a desktop email client. Webmail has several advantages, including an ability to send and receive email away from the user's normal base using a web browser, thus eliminating the need for an email client. The main limitations of webmail are that user interactions are subject to the website's operating system (including file size limits) and the general inability to download email messages and compose or work on the messages offline. The advantage of webmail provided by a user's mail server is that emails can remain on the mail server until the user can return to their base computer, when they can be downloaded.

