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He also has written our "Webhead" column, and will continue to contribute to it.
And the thought was still there, echoing in the otherwise silent room: Good going, webhead.
As that Webhead column explained, the design of a site can drastically affect the page count.
Is it the right move for the webhead to be making, or is he in way over his head - again?!
I framed pages in my last Webhead to compare search results from various search services.
We showed you today's cover, then our table of contents, and you eventually clicked on the "Webhead" link.
"Any number of people, webhead.
"But I'd appreciate it if you didn't call me Webhead when I'm in civvies."
"You're over Manhattan now, webhead!
The take-home lesson of this edition of Webhead is that all electronic devices are converging at a wicked rate.
Webhead says don't underestimate the cable companies, who have such enormous bandwidth at their disposal that they can do anything (see my piece on bandwidth).
Cap glanced at Jarvis-who, ever the perfect butler, pretended to be invisible-and said: "No problem, webhead.
"Not yet, webhead.
Watson is less a lawyer and more a geeky Webhead who conducts exotic searches on the Internet and analyzes copyright claims for computer-game makers.
The ongoing Java war (read about Java in "Webhead" and "The Motley Fool") is a battle for this strategic center.
The inaugural "Webhead" column ("Push Me, Pull You," by Bill Barnes), while informative, is nothing more than an extraordinarily long advertisement for Microsoft.
Vin Gonzales - He works for the NYPD, and hates Spider-Man, thinking that the webhead is up to no good.
Webhead of the Week - The 'Webhead of the Week' gets the opportunity to talk to Maude and Kyle live via webcam.
Special Agent Doug Deeley, a tall black man whose perpetually bemused expression testified to the various unlikelihoods he encountered in the course of a typical working day, said: "Nice going, webhead.
Their machines scan every Web page they can find by a process known as crawling (see my discussion of crawling in a previous "Webhead" column) and put every word on every page into a giant index.
Last August, in a "Webhead" column by our then-Program Manager Bill Barnes, we attempted to answer that question, while at the same time explaining why any claims about the popularity of Web sites are inherently suspicious.
Our UNSUB has to be a loner, probably a webhead whose social circle is movies--" "But my theory would explain the requests to reimburse the affected parties by video-rental and SAG-donation proxy... this person has ties right now to the industry.