May. 26th, 2010 10:08

Slash

cos: (Default)
[personal profile] cos
A slash: /

A backslash: \

Slashfic is named after the slash: Kirk/Spock
Fractions are written sometimes with slashes: 1/2
When you list alternatives in a sentence, you may say "slash": his/her
There are slashes in URLs: http://cos.livejournal.com/profile

Backslashes appear nowhere in the natural world, aside from a crufty old operating system from Microsoft and some of its descendants. Unfortunately, it seems to have gotten half the computing world into saying "backslash" wherever either a slash or a backslash appears. This creates confusion, and wastes syllables. I know syllables aren't such a limited resource and we can always make more, but conservation of syllables seems to be a driving force in the evolution of English, so we should be able to defeat this annoying anomaly.

If in doubt, just say "slash". You'll rarely be wrong (as opposed to being wrong almost all the time if you're in doubt and say "blackslash").

Please pass it on! Thank you :)
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Date: 2010-05-27 19:24 (UTC)

From: (Anonymous)
when you enter an address into the browser's address bar it assumes the protocol of http and will attempt to load a page with that protocol, but it could easily be https (different protocol and port), ftp, ssh, smb, etc.

The point being is that in a URL there is a protocol portion for a reason.

getting rid of www. would be good for a lot of sites.. others it is important to (consider IBM with dozens of webservers pumping out millions of pages versus their other corporate presence and entities.

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