Within the website, each screenful of information is called a page. Pages may contain text, or graphic images, or even photographs, sound and video.
A main feature are the "links" embedded within a page that can be clicked with a computer mouse and which transport viewers to other pages. To continue with the brochure analogy, you would normally open a brochure at the front or the back and browse forwards or backwards a page at a time. With a website, the user decides the order they want to see the pages in by clicking the links that interest them.
This interactivity generates a sense of ownership and participation in the user, binding them to the information much more tightly than a traditional brochure.
To maximise this benefit, it really needs someone with an understanding of interactive programming to get the best out of creating the electronic pages and links that build the website.
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