This has been a computer scientist's revolution; but we all share in its results. Only a few years ago, the World Wide Web was known just to a small research community; it is hard to remember that the voluminous content we see on the WWW, expanding by an estimated million pages each day, has grown up around us in so short a time. Researchers now release their results to the Web before they appear in print; corporations list their URLs alongside their toll-free numbers; news media and entertainment companies vie for the attention of a browsing audience. The Web has become the most visible manifestation of a new medium: a global, populist hypertext. The speed with which this medium has emerged is a testament to the universality of the co...
This study describes the evolution of the international hyperlink network. The World Wide Web is a d...
World Wide Web (WWW) is a vast repository of interlinked hypertext documents known as web pages. A h...
Heimeriks and van den Besselaar problematise how to interpret the hyperlink structure of the World W...
The explosive growth of Web and social networks has revealed the need to (re-)analyze the connection...
The World Wide Web grows through a decentralized, almost anarchic process, and this has resulted in ...
After a decade of rapid growth the World Wide Web, or the Web for short, has become a center marketp...
In this paper we consider the Web as a network of networks and reflect on its evolution, firstly by ...
The World Wide Web is growing rapidly and revolutionizing the means of information access. It can be...
The study of the Web as a graph is not only fascinating in its own right, but also yields valuable i...
The World Wide Web contains an enormous amount of information, but it can be exceedingly difficult f...
Previous studies of the Web graph structure have focused on the graph structure at the level of indi...
The web can be viewed as a directed graph if we take entities in the web as the vertices and connect...
Knowledge about the general graph structure of the World Wide Web is important for understanding the...
Links play a twofold role on the web: they open the channels through which users access information,...
The Internet is a prototypical example of info-structure that has grown following a self-organized d...
This study describes the evolution of the international hyperlink network. The World Wide Web is a d...
World Wide Web (WWW) is a vast repository of interlinked hypertext documents known as web pages. A h...
Heimeriks and van den Besselaar problematise how to interpret the hyperlink structure of the World W...
The explosive growth of Web and social networks has revealed the need to (re-)analyze the connection...
The World Wide Web grows through a decentralized, almost anarchic process, and this has resulted in ...
After a decade of rapid growth the World Wide Web, or the Web for short, has become a center marketp...
In this paper we consider the Web as a network of networks and reflect on its evolution, firstly by ...
The World Wide Web is growing rapidly and revolutionizing the means of information access. It can be...
The study of the Web as a graph is not only fascinating in its own right, but also yields valuable i...
The World Wide Web contains an enormous amount of information, but it can be exceedingly difficult f...
Previous studies of the Web graph structure have focused on the graph structure at the level of indi...
The web can be viewed as a directed graph if we take entities in the web as the vertices and connect...
Knowledge about the general graph structure of the World Wide Web is important for understanding the...
Links play a twofold role on the web: they open the channels through which users access information,...
The Internet is a prototypical example of info-structure that has grown following a self-organized d...
This study describes the evolution of the international hyperlink network. The World Wide Web is a d...
World Wide Web (WWW) is a vast repository of interlinked hypertext documents known as web pages. A h...
Heimeriks and van den Besselaar problematise how to interpret the hyperlink structure of the World W...