That varies a lot, depending on your browsing habits - how long you stay on a page, whether you view movies or high-quality photographs, etc. If you have a fast connection, a gigabyte - or several - can be used up rather quickly; if you pay per GB, this can be a problem. It would usually be preferable to have an unlimited plan, even if it offers a slower connection speed.
It depends what you're doing with the allowance. If you're just browsing the web - you'll get much more time than if you're downloading content.
Excellent question. Assuming that you are not talking about using remote servers for database retrieval, but are actually asking how to use the web itself as a datasource. This is topic of much research which goes under the name of the Semantic Web. See the related link for the Semantic Web's homepage. Its goal is to make web content, all web content, machine readable so that software agents can collate, collaborate, and consume web data in the same manner as we currently can with databases. This technology is still in its infancy, but for more information, visit the related link.
Yes there are various different companies providing detailed web statistics for varying sites. There are graphs available online that show web usage statistics as well as Web statistics reporting software that may be purchased by individual businesses to collect and analyze their own web traffic data.
when information is taken from somewhere else then given to you ie your homework.you take it from the web then give it to your teahers.
This web is cheep
Browsing the web for an hour uses about 20 megabytes of data. Things like watching Youtube videos or using radio apps use more data than simple browsing.
Yes, browsing the web does contribute to your data limit, though not as much as downloads, video streaming, etc.
enumerate the steps in browsing the web
Browsing the web.
"Surfing the web" or "web browsing" or "Google it"
Three other web browsers are Mozilla Firefox, Safari, and Opera.
Three other web browsers are Mozilla Firefox, Opera, and Safari.
There are probably a lot of different web browsing programs. But the most well known are Internet explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera and Safari.
The battery life of iPhone 3G is very short. That is, only around 5 hours if you are using voice (talking) or data (web browsing). The battery life extends to 24 hours if you are just using it to listen to music.
On a 250 MB data you can surf around 7-8 hours of web browsing, 15 tracks, 7-8 short video downloads and 150 email every month.
No. Texting is a separate service that you pay for individually or in a bundled plan. Data usage is downloads, email and web browsing
Netscape, AOL, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox