Wikipedia
RFC may refer to Request for Comments - a series of numbered Internet informational documents and standardsReconstruction Finance Corporation - Hoover's attempt to stem the Great DepressionRoyal Flying Corps - the over-land air arm of the British military during most of World War IRequest For Change - ITIL terminology in the IT Service Management arena to describe a request to Change the Information technologyIT infrastructureRegenerative fuel cellRagefire Chasm - an instance dungeon in the computer game World of WarcraftRecursive Flow ClassificationRadio Free ColoradoRemote Function Call - from within SAP R/3Or, within WikipediaWikipedia:Requests for commentRequest For CommentTLAdisambig cs:RFCda:Request for Commentsde:Request for Commentsfr:Request for commentsit:RFCnl:Request For Commentspl:RFCja:Request for Commentsfi:RFCsl:Zahteva po razlagisv:RFC
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Websites
Trivial Proxy
Trivial Proxy is a small application that allow to see and log network activity of the any applications(browsers, email clients etc.). So what does that mean in English? Simple, run TrivialProxy and configure it to redirect the local port to the specified host:port; configure the appication to use this port and localhost (it's very easy, there's), and voila! You're seeing and logging the network activity of this application! Supports HTTP (web), HTTPS (secure web), POP3 (recieve mail), SMTP (send mail), NNTP (newsgroups)! It works great with Internet Explorer, Firefox, Outlook, and many more! Trivial Proxy is totally FREE for personal and non-commersial usage.
http://www.xrayapp.com/trivialproxy/
RFC-Editor
Contains RFC news, search feature, details of the RFC-Online Project, and ASCII and PDF versions of all documents.
http://www.rfc-editor.org/
Internet FAQ Consortium
This searchable archive contains Usenet Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) postings in hypertext format and in FTP archive textual format. Also includes information about FAQ authoring and FAQ maintenance.
http://www.faqs.org/
rfc-ignorant.org
The home for domains who don't play by the rules. A number of lists (at present "dsn", "abuse", "postmaster", "whois" and "ipwhois") which contain domains or IP networks whose administrators choose not to obey the RFC's, the building block "rules" of the net.
http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/
World Wide Web Consortium
International industry consortium founded in 1994 whose purpose is to develop specifications, guidelines, software, and tools to promote the Internet's evolution and ensure its interoperability.
http://www.w3.org/
The Internet Engineering Task Force
The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is a large open international community of network designers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with the evolution of the Internet architecture and the smooth operation of the Internet. It is open to any interested individual.
http://www.ietf.org/
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