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Site Info - Unm.eduOverview of web technologies used by Unm.edu. Website Background New Mexico's Flagship University | The University of New Mexico Description on Homepage Top 100k among all websites Popularity rank Website Quality Alerts Found on page https://news.unm.edu/news/unm-holds-safety-forum-to-provide-investigation-update-to-the-campus-community At our the last visit we found the server time to be approximately 4 hours slow. Are you the webmaster of this site? Register as user to get quality alerts per email. WordPress is an open source blog publishing and content management system, based on PHP and MySQL. PHP is a scripting language for creating websites. PHP 8.1.32 Microsoft's Active Server Pages technology on the .NET framework. ASP.NET JavaScript is a lightweight, object-oriented, cross-platform scripting language, often used within web pages. jQuery is a JavaScript library that simplifies HTML document traversing, event handling, animating and Ajax interaction. Originally developed by John Resig. jQuery 3.6.0 Bootstrap is an open source HTML, CSS, and JavaScript framework. Bootstrap Modernizr is a JavaScript library that detects HTML5 and CSS3 features in the visitors browser. Modernizr 2.6.2 Moment.js is a library to manipulate dates in JavaScript. Moment.js ASP.NET Ajax is a JavaScript library based on ASP.NET, developed by Microsoft. ASP.NET Ajax Animate is a CSS library focusing on animations. Animate The Apache HTTP Server is an open source web server by the Apache Software Foundation. Apache 2.4.62 The Internet Information Services (IIS) are a set of Internet-based services for Windows, developed by Microsoft. Microsoft-IIS Unix is a range of operating systems originally developed at Bell Labs. This includes Unix and Unix-like systems, such as Linux. Unix Windows is an operating system produced by Microsoft. Windows Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) is a Linux distribution. Red Hat Amazon is a US-based e-commerce and cloud computing provider. Amazon Google provides various services to run on its servers. Google Amazon is a US-based e-commerce and cloud computing provider. Amazon Google provides various services to run on its servers. Google Microsoft is a multinational technology company headquartered in USA, also offering email services. Sectigo (formerly Comodo CA) is a US-based SSL certificate authority. Let’s Encrypt is a free, automated, and open certificate authority provided by the Internet Security Research Group. Let’s Encrypt GlobalSign is an IT security service provider, also operating as SSL certificate authority. GlobalSign Starfield Technologies is an SSL certificate authority owned by Go Daddy. Starfield jsDelivr is a service for hosting JavaScript files. jsDelivr Google Hosted Libraries (formerly called Google Libraries API) is a content distribution network for the most popular, open-source JavaScript libraries, provided by Google. Google Hosted Libraries Google Analytics is a free service to get detailed statistics about the visitors of a website, provided by Google. This includes the Ads conversion tracking and the Floodlight services. Meta Pixel (formerly Facebook Pixel) is an analytics tool to track actions on websites. Microsoft Clarity is a website visitor tracking tool. The Google Advertising network consists of AdSense, DoubleClick and other services. The Google Tag Manager is a Google service to support webmasters to manage tags on their websites. A Twitter/X Button allows a Twitter user to post a tweet from the visited site. Facebook Social Plugins provide a way for Facebook users to share web pages with their friends. Facebook LinkedIn Share Buttons enable visitors to to share website content with their LinkedIn network. LinkedIn External Cascading Style Sheets define style rules in a separate CSS file. Embedded Cascading Style Sheets define a set of style rules in a <style> element within a web page. Inline Cascading Style Sheets define style rules directly within an (X)HTML element using the style attribute. Session cookies are temporary cookies, which are deleted when the user closes the browser. Session Cookies HttpOnly cookies are used only in the HTTP protocol and not in client side scripts, which may increase security. HttpOnly Cookies Non-HttpOnly cookies are used in the HTTP protocol and also in client side scripts, which may be a security threat. Non-HttpOnly Cookies Secure cookies are used only via an encrypted connections, which may increase security. Secure Cookies Non-secure cookies may be used via an unencrypted connections, which may be a security threat. Non-Secure Cookies Gzip (GNU zip) is a file compression algorithm. A strong ETag is an HTTP header field for validation of cached web pages, that indicates a byte-for-byte identical page in the cache. HTTP/2 is the second major version of the HTTP network protocol. HTTP/2 HTTP/3 is the third major version of the HTTP network protocol, derived from the QUIC protocol. HTTP/3 HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) defines a mechanism enabling web sites to declare themselves accessible only via secure connections. HTTP Strict Transport Security The websites redirects visitors to its www subdomain, e.g. from example.com to www.example.com. The websites redirects visitors to use SSL encryption, e.g. from http://example.com/ to https://example.com/. The Open Graph protocol, originally developed by Facebook, is an RDFa-based format that enables any web page to become a rich object in a social graph. Open Graph Twitter/X Cards enable automatic attachment of photos, videos and media elements to tweets. Twitter/X Cards Generic RDFa (Resource Description Framework in attributes) is RDFa without further specialization. Generic RDFa Microdata is a specification to integrate metadata within existing content on web pages. Microdata HTML5 is the fifth revision of the HTML standard. UTF-8 (8-bit Unicode Transformation Format) is a variable-length character encoding for Unicode, which is backwards compatible with ASCII. PNG (Portable Network Graphics) is a lossless compression image format, suitable to store graphics with uniformly colored areas, and originally introduced as a free, open-source successor of GIF. JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a lossy compression method suitable to store photographic images. Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is an XML-based vector image format. GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) is a lossless compression image format, originally introduced by CompuServe and suitable to store graphics, logos and simple animations. United States educational institutes
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