A favorite is a stored address of a web page in Internet Explorer. Internet Explorer's favorites are like Netscape Navigator's bookmarks. Storing favorites saves you from having to type in the entire address of a web page when you want to go to it. Rather you can just select a favorite from the Favorite menu which will instantly load the web page. This makes it easy to keep track of your favorite web pages.
Favorite web addresses or URLs that are saved in a browser program. Also known as "bookmarks".
Favorites are predefined links to Web sites. Favorites are also known as bookmarks. Favorites in Internet Explorer can be configured to automatically notify the user when content changes.
this is in member's User CP's and allows them to keep a list of links to their favorite boards. You click the Add Favorite button in the User CP and then add the Board ID into the input field. That creates a link to the board in the member's User CP main page.
Permanently retained links to your favourite WWW documents or sites, can be stored on your computer’s hard disc or on a floppy disc. You can create these very simply when you are actually viewing a document by choosing the Favorite (Explorer) or Bookmark (Netscape) menu.
Favorites are a list of Web sites you enjoy, and which you save for easy retrieval. Occasionally, you will hear the term bookmark in the context of Favorites, as in "bookmark this site for future reference." To add a Web page to your list of Favorites: In MSN or Internet Explorer, view the page you wish to add to your list of Favorites. Click "Favorites" in the menu bar, and then select "Add To Favorites". To view a Web page from your list of Favorites: In MSN or Internet Explorer, click Favorites in the menu bar. Then scroll down and select the page you want to view.
See bookmarking. One′s ″favorites″ appear on a list of URLs that you have instructed your web browser to remember, so that you can find them easily when you wish to visit them again.
the Internet Explorer version of a bookmark.
Also called bookmarks. These are saved references to websites that enable you to return to each site instantly without having to retype the address.
Add your favorite web pages to this easily accessible list for easy browsing
another name for a bookmark, as used in the Internet Explorer browser.
Also known as Bookmarks, this is a place in your browser where you can save links to pages that you'd like to visit again.
A tag that marks a page so that the page can be retrieved from the Favorites or Bookmarks menu.
Saving the URL of an interesting website by marking it. In this way, a collection of favourite websites can be made. This site can be rapidly retrieved by clicking its name in your bookmarks list. Microsoft Internet Explorer calls the bookmarks: favorites.
Nearly all web browsers support a bookmarking/address book feature that lets you save the address (URL) of a web page so that you can easily re-visit the page at a later time. The equivalent of this in Netscape Navigator is "Bookmarks".
The feature used in Internet Explorer to mark a location on the Internet so that you may quickly return there at a later time without having to do another search.
The feather used in Internet Explorer to mark a location on the Internet so that you might quickly be able to return to this location at a later time.
A long-standing tradition in weblogs is providing links to other sites, especially other weblogs. The Favorites section in Blogware allows you to create lists of links, or blogrolls. You can put all your links into a single list or create an unlimited number of lists, each representing a different category of link.
view in the Phone application on the Treo(tm) 600 and 650 smartphones displaying buttons that you can tap to speed dial phone numbers, launch an application, write an SMS message to a particular number or open a website in the web browser application. You can create up to fifty of your own buttons in Favorites. Also a screen view on the Palm TX handheld and LifeDrive(tm) mobile manager that displays the name and icon for a user-configurable list of frequently used software applications for quick access to the listed applications. The Home button can be configured to display this view.
This refers to method of storing and organizing selected URLs (links) in Internet Explorer. See also Bookmark.
Microsoft 'speak' for bookmark
A way of storing web addresses so you can find them easily (Favorites can be found on Microsoft Internet Explorer - they are called "Bookmarks" on Netscape).
Same as bookmarks, this is a stored list of web sites.
A method of storing individual web pages or web locations on your computer. Bookmark is the term used by Netscape; Favorites is the Internet Explorer term.
When you get to a particular site on the Web, you can issue a command to your Web browser which creates a 'bookmark', so that you can easily get back to that site in the future without typing it’s address (URL) again. Called 'bookmarks' in Netscape.
Section of a browser that contains a list of sites that the user has collected for future reference.
A catalog of your favorite web addresses
In Internet Explorer, a collection of URLs that the user saved because of frequent use or to make them easy to find again. In Netscape these are called Bookmarks..
A feature in Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser that enables the user to record URLs that will be frequently used by adding them to a special menu. The equivalent in Netscape Navigator is Bookmarks. Once the URL is on the list, it is easy to return to that Web page simply by clicking on the link in the list, rather that retyping the entire URL.
Similar to bookmarks, this is a list of places you visit the most. You can set these up to appear on your browser when you click on a Favorites button.
On Internet Explorer, it allows you to save websites you like.
The term Microsoft Internet Explorer uses to refer to Bookmarks. These are Web pages or other Internet resources that have been marked for later use.
A method of storing the URL's of your favorite web sites in a managable fashion. You can usually attach a nickname to the favorite, making it easier to identify each favorite from your list.
In Microsoft Internet Explorer you can tell the program to remember a list of your "favorite" Web pages, so that you can go back to them easily, without having to type in the address (URL) again. When you add a page to your favorites, you can jump to it again by clicking "favorites" on the tool bar and selecting from the list. "Favorites" are similar to the "bookmarks" used by Netscape Navigator and other browsers.
Favorites is a file in Internet Explorer wherein you can add favourite pages to a list for quick and easy access to them later.
(sometimes called bookmarks) a folder in Internet Explorer used to store shortcuts of web sites you wish to return to. Once in place all you need do is click on the link and the browser takes you to the site.
In the Internet Explorer browser, a means to get back to a URL you like, similar to Netscape's Bookmarks.
Your "favorites" are plans that you're interested in. When you're trying to decide which plan to join, you can create a list of plans you're interested in so that you can return to the Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Finder later and still be able to see those plans. To add or remove plans from your list of "favorites", click the "Add" or "Remove" buttons on the right side of screen under the "favorites" column.
Web addresses saved on the web browser for easy access on future visits.
While most browsers use the term "bookmark" for web sites that have been marked for easy reference, the Internet Explorer and AOL call them "Favorites."
The Internet Explorer equivalent of a bookmark, it is a web site location which has been saved to an organized list for quick access at a later time.
Another name for bookmarks.
A list of files or Web pages you plan to use frequently. Microsoft Internet Explorer lets you maintain a list of your favorite websites to make it easy to return to them again. (Called Bookmarks when using Netscape Navigator)