Recent Technology Changes in camping-am-see.de

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Technologies in use by camping-am-see.de

Wordpress SEO Plugin

Provides a widget which lets a visitor translate your webpage into a different language.

Anti-bot CAPTCHA widget that helps digitize books by providing snippets of books for people to enter the text for. Owned by Google.

WordPress Page Builder

A semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability.

jQuery: The Write Less, Do More, JavaScript Library.

Google APIs are application programming interfaces developed by Google which allow communication with Google Services and their integration to other services.

iOS Safari instructions for mobile web apps

This site uses the viewport meta tag which means the content may be optimized for mobile content.

Websites using Google technologies

Website using Instagram integrations or links.

Website with links to Instagram profiles or pictures

A family of standard web feed formats used to publish frequently updated information like blog entries, news headlines, audio and video.

websites using the $ symbol on their website - meaning it may accept payment in this currency used in Israel.

Website using the € symbol on their website - meaning it may accept payment in Euros.

Klarna Checkout takes the tries to take the hassle out of buying on mobile devices.

nginx [engine x] is a HTTP server and mail proxy server written by Igor Sysoev.

Websites using https protocol.

The DOCTYPE is a required preamble for HTML5 websites.

The Open Graph protocol enables any web page to become a rich object in a social graph, a open protocol supported by Facebook

This page contains a meta robots tag which tells search engines and robots to index or not index the page.

Meta descriptions are HTML attributes that provide concise explanations of the contents of web pages. Meta descriptions are commonly used on search engine result pages (SERPs) to display preview snippets for a given page.

A canonical link element is an HTML element that helps webmasters prevent duplicate content issues by specifying the "canonical", or "preferred".

UTF-8 (8-bit UCS/Unicode Transformation Format) is a variable-length character encoding for Unicode. It is the preferred encoding for web pages.