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INTRODUCTION
1.1 Overview
Information technology (IT) is the use of any computers, storage, networking and
other physical devices, infrastructure and processes to create, process, store, secure and
exchange all forms of electronic data. Typically, IT is used in the context of enterprise
operations as opposed to personal or entertainment technologies. The commercial use of IT
encompasses both computer technology and telephony.
The term information technology was coined by the Harvard Business Review, in
order to make a distinction between purpose-built machines designed to perform a limited
scope of functions and general-purpose computing machines that could be programmed for
various tasks. As the IT industry evolved from the mid-20th century, computing capability
advanced while device cost and energy consumption fell lower, a cycle that continues today
when new technologies emerge.
1.2 Motivation
1.4 Objectives
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1.5 Scope
1.6 Significant
1.7 Organization
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CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Framework
2.4 Summery
3
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Introduction
3.4 Summery
4
CHAPTER FOUR
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Implementation
4.3 Implementation
4.4 Summery
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CHAPTER FIVE
5.1 Conclusion
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REFERENCES
[1] A. A. Andrews, J. Offutt, and R. T. Alexander, "Testing web applications by modeling with
FSMs," Software & Systems Modeling, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 326-345, 2005.
[2] S. Aghaei, M. A. Nematbakhsh, and H. K. Farsani, "Evolution of the world wide web: From
WEB 1.0 TO WEB 4.0," International Journal of Web & Semantic Technology, vol. 3, no. 1,
p. 1, 2012.
[3] A. A. Algosaibi, S. Albahli, S. F. Khasawneh, and A. Melton, "WEB EVOLUTION-THE
SHIFT FROM INFORMATION PUBLISHING TO REASONING," 2017.
[4] H. Story. (2015). Developing Web 3.0. Available:
http://bblfish.net/work/presentations/2007/BOF-6747.pdf
[5] G. Kappel, B. Pröll, S. Reich, and W. Retschitzegger, Web engineering. John Wiley & Sons,
2006.
[6] N. Spivak and L. Tucker. (2007). Developing Web 3.0. Available:
http://bblfish.net/work/presentations/2007/BOF-6747.pdf
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APPENDIXES (optional)
APPENDIX-1
Limited of chapters:
Chapter 1: 4-6 pages
Chapter 2: 10-15 pages
Chapter 3: 4-6 pages
Chapter 4: 10-15 pages
Chapter 5: 2-3 pages
Tables:
1 Book
2 Pen
3 Mouse
4 Keyboard
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Images, diagrams, and charts
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Bullets and numbering
One
Two
Three
1. One
2. Two
3. Three
1. One
a. New
b. Old
2. Two
3. Three
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