Talk:Web navigation

University of Michigan Students' Editing
In order to improve the “web navigation” wikipedia page, we plan to organize it into at least three distinct sections consisting of the overview, history, types of web navigation, styles of web navigation, and references headings on the topic. This will allow for the page to be formatted in a precise and methodical manner for future users to easily navigate in and understand completely. Our group plans to add research and findings from various scholarly articles and we also hope to expand the page to show its correlation with currently existing Wikipedia articles. We are a group of five University of Michigan students and hope our efforts will improve the page and allow for this to stem further development on the topic by other editors. Enbarlev (talk) 20:02, 25 February 2014 (UTC)

Hi guys, This is Chris from SI110. Your reference list isn't looking quite right. Not sure what "Additional verification" means. Take a look at the tutorial on citing here: Training/For_students/Citing_sources — Preceding unsigned comment added by Cleeder (talk • contribs) 03:09, 13 March 2014 (UTC)

Hey Chris, we're not really sure what the "Additional verification" is either. It was present on the page prior to our editing of it and we don't know if we should delete it. Since we left the sentences and information previous editors had put on the page, what do you think we need to do? Enbarlev (talk) 21:12, 13 March 2014 (UTC) We fixed it, thank you Chris. Enbarlev (talk) 03:14, 20 March 2014 (UTC)

This article is just about Web navigation on single website
This article isn't also about web navigation on the larger scale, across separate websites, right? It's not about what's usually called "browsing" - e.g. using Google and Wikipedia to research topics one is interested in?!

If this is in fact true please make it clearer in the article. For a start there should be a note on top of the article that links to browsing.

--Fixuture (talk) 23:42, 7 January 2016 (UTC)

ICT
Web navigation refers to the process of navigating a network of information resources in the World Wide Web, which is organized as hypertext or hypermedia.[1] The user interface that is used to do so is called a web browser 136.158.64.17 (talk) 10:42, 12 December 2022 (UTC)