The Internet stores data like a giant, never-ending toy box that everyone can access from anywhere.
Imagine you have a favorite toy box at home, and every time you want to play with your toys, you put them back in the box. Now imagine that toy box is not just in your house but in many houses around the world, and instead of toys, it stores information like pictures, videos, or messages.
Each time you send a message or save a picture online, it's like putting a new toy into this giant toy box. But instead of using hands, computers use tiny bits of information, called bytes, to represent everything, like how one letter in a word is just one piece of your favorite puzzle.
These bytes travel through the Internet on special highways made of wires and signals, like cars moving from one place to another. When they reach their destination, they're stored inside computers or special storage places called servers.
So when you want to see that picture again later, it's just like digging into the toy box, the computer finds the bytes that make up your picture and shows them back to you.
Examples
- When you save a document, it’s like putting a letter into a special drawer that can be found from anywhere in the world.
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See also
- How Does the Internet Remember Everything?
- How Does the Internet Remember What You’ve Done Before?
- How Can a Single Bit of Data Control the World?
- How Can A Single Bit Of Information Change The World?
- How Can a Single Atom Hold Thousands of Images?