{"success":true,"data":{"query":"Web Foundations","limit":10,"count":10,"sources":["wiki_real_estate.hat","wiki_artificial_intelligence.hat","wiki_dallas.hat","web_1779060034.hat","web_1779060046.hat"],"synced":[],"results":[{"source":"wiki_real_estate.hat","text":"History of real estate\nThe natural right of a person to own property as a concept can be seen as having roots in Roman law as well as Greek philosophy. The profession of appraisal can be seen as beginning in England during the 1500s, as agricultural needs required land clearing and land preparation. Textbooks on the subject of surveying began to be written and the term \"surveying\" was used in England, while the term \"appraising\" was more used in North America. Natural law which can be seen as \"universal law\" was discussed among writers of the 15th and 16th century as it pertained to \"property theory\" and the inter-state relations dealing with foreign investments and the protection of citizens private property abroad. Natural law can be seen as having an influence in Emerich de Vattel's 1758 treatise The Law of Nations which conceptualized the idea of private property.\nOne of the largest initial real estate deals in history known as the \"Louisiana Purchase\" happened in 1803 when the Louisiana Purchase Treaty was signed. This treaty paved the way for western expansion and made the U.S. the owners of the \"Louisiana Territory\" as the land was bought from France for fifteen million dollars, making each acre roughly 4 cents. The oldest real estate brokerage firm was established in 1855 in Chicago, Illinois, and was initially known as \"L. D. Olmsted & Co.\" but is now known as \"Baird & Warner\". In 1908, the National Association of Realtors was founded in Chicago and in 1916, the name was changed to the National Association of Real Estate Boards and this was also when the term \"realtor\" was coined to identify real estate professionals.\nThe stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression in the U.S. caused a major drop in real estate worth and prices and ultimately resulted in depreciation of 50% for the four years after 1929. Housing financing in the U.S. was greatly affected by the Banking Act of 1933 and the National Housing Act in 1934 because it allowed for mortgage insurance for home buyers and this system was implemented by the Federal Deposit Insurance as well as the Federal Housing Administration. In 1938, an amendment was made to the National Housing Act and Fannie Mae, a government agency, was established to serve as a secondary market for mortgages and to give lenders more money in order for new homes to be funded.\nTitle VIII of the Civil Rights Act in the U.S., which is also known as the Fair Housing Act, was put into place in 1968 and dealt with the incorporation of African Americans into neighborhoods as the issues of discrimination were analyzed with the renting, buying, and financing of homes. Internet real estate as a concept began with the first appearance of real estate platforms on the World Wide Web (www) and occurred in 1999.","score":45.103059609765616,"links":[]},{"source":"wiki_artificial_intelligence.hat","text":"ARTICLE: Artificial intelligence\nArtificial intelligence (AI) is the capability of computational systems to perform tasks typically associated with human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and decision-making. It is a field of research in engineering, mathematics and computer science that develops and studies methods and software that enable machines to perceive their environment and use learning and intelligence to take actions that maximize their chances of achieving defined goals.\nHigh-profile applications of AI include advanced web search engines, chatbots, virtual assistants, autonomous vehicles, and play and analysis in strategy games (e.g., chess and Go). Since the 2020s, generative AI has become widely available to generate images, audio, and videos from text prompts.\nThe traditional goals of AI research include learning, reasoning, knowledge representation, planning, natural language processing, and perception, as well as support for robotics. To reach these goals, AI researchers have used techniques including state space search and mathematical optimization, formal logic, artificial neural networks, and methods based on statistics, operations research, and economics. AI also draws upon psychology, linguistics, philosophy, neuroscience, and other fields. Some companies, such as OpenAI, Google DeepMind and Meta, aim to create artificial general intelligence (AGI) – AI that can complete virtually any cognitive task at least as well as a human.\nArtificial intelligence was founded as an academic discipline in 1956, and the field went through multiple cycles of optimism throughout its history, followed by periods of disappointment and loss of funding, known as AI winters. Funding and interest increased substantially after 2012, when graphics processing units began being used to accelerate neural networks, and deep learning outperformed previous AI techniques. This growth accelerated further after 2017 with the transformer architecture. In the 2020s, an AI boom has coincided with advances in generative AI, which allowed for the creation and modification of media. In addition to AI safety and unintended consequences and harms from the use of AI, ethical concerns, AI's long-term effects, and potential existential risks have prompted discussions of AI regulation.","score":42.37481353769364,"links":[]},{"source":"wiki_artificial_intelligence.hat","text":"Risks and harm\nPrivacy and copyright\nMachine learning algorithms require large amounts of data. The techniques used to acquire this data have raised concerns about privacy, surveillance and copyright.\nAI-powered devices and services, such as virtual assistants and IoT products, continuously collect personal information, raising concerns about intrusive data gathering and unauthorized access by third parties. The loss of privacy is further exacerbated by AI's ability to process and combine vast amounts of data, potentially leading to a surveillance society where individual activities are constantly monitored and analyzed without adequate safeguards or transparency.\nSensitive user data collected may include online activity records, geolocation data, video, or audio. For example, in order to build speech recognition algorithms, Amazon has recorded millions of private conversations and allowed temporary workers to listen to and transcribe some of them. Opinions about this widespread surveillance range from those who see it as a necessary evil to those for whom it is clearly unethical and a violation of the right to privacy.\nAI developers argue that this is the only way to deliver valuable applications and have developed several techniques that attempt to preserve privacy while still obtaining the data, such as data aggregation, de-identification and differential privacy. Since 2016, some privacy experts, such as Cynthia Dwork, have begun to view privacy in terms of fairness. Brian Christian wrote that experts have pivoted \"from the question of 'what they know' to the question of 'what they're doing with it'.\"\nGenerative AI is often trained on unlicensed copyrighted works, including in domains such as images or computer code; the output is then used under the rationale of \"fair use\". Experts disagree about how well and under what circumstances this rationale will hold up in courts of law; relevant factors may include \"the purpose and character of the use of the copyrighted work\" and \"the effect upon the potential market for the copyrighted work\". Website owners can indicate that they do not want their content scraped via a \"robots.txt\" file. However, some companies will scrape content regardless because the robots.txt file has no real authority. In 2023, leading authors (including John Grisham and Jonathan Franzen) sued AI companies for using their work to train generative AI. Another discussed approach is to envision a separate sui generis system of protection for creations generated by AI to ensure fair attribution and compensation for human authors.","score":42.37481353769364,"links":[]},{"source":"wiki_artificial_intelligence.hat","text":"Overview\nAI agents possess several key attributes, including goal-directed behavior, natural language interfaces, the capacity to use external tools, and the ability to perform multi-step tasks. Their control flow is frequently driven by large language models (LLMs). Agent systems may also include memory components, planning logic, tool interfaces, and orchestration software for coordinating agent components.\nAI agents do not have a standard definition. NIST has described agentic AI as an emerging area requiring standards for secure operation, interoperability, and reliable interaction with external systems.\nA common application of AI agents is the automation of tasks, for example booking travel plans based on a user's prompted request. \nCompanies such as Google, Microsoft and Amazon Web Services have offered platforms for deploying pre-built AI agents. Several protocols have been proposed for standardizing inter-agent communication, with examples including the Model Context Protocol, Gibberlink, and many others. Some of these protocols are also used for connecting agents with external applications.\nIn December 2025, Linux Foundation announced the formation of the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF), with the goal of ensuring agentic AI evolves transparently and collaboratively.","score":42.37481353769364,"links":[]},{"source":"wiki_dallas.hat","text":"Media\nDallas has several local newspapers, magazines, television stations and radio stations that serve the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, which is the fifth-largest media market in the United States. Dallas has one major daily newspaper, The Dallas Morning News, which was founded in 1885 by A. H. Belo and is A. H. Belo's flagship newspaper.\nThe Dallas Times Herald, started in 1888, was the Morning News' major competitor until Belo purchased it on December 8, 1991, and closed the paper down the next day. Other daily newspapers are Al Día, a Spanish-language paper published by Belo, and a number of ethnic newspapers printed in languages such as Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese.\nOther publications include the Dallas Weekly and the Elite News, all weekly news publications. The Dallas Observer and the North Texas Journal are also alternative weekly newspapers. The Dallas Morning News formerly had a weekly publication, Neighborsgo, which came out every Friday and focused on community news. Readers could post stories and contribute content to the website.\nD Magazine is a notable monthly magazine about business, life, and entertainment in Dallas–Fort Worth. Local visitor magazines include \"WHERE Magazine\" and \"Travelhost\"–available at hotel desks or in guest rooms. In addition, the park cities and suburbs such as Plano also have their own community newspapers. Also, THE Magazine covers the contemporary arts scene.\nIn terms of the larger metro area, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram is another major daily newspaper, covering Fort Worth's metropolitan division. It also publishes a major Spanish-language newspaper for the entire metro area known as La Estrella. To the north of Dallas and Fort Worth, the Denton Record-Chronicle primarily covers news for the city of Denton and Denton County.\nArea television stations affiliated with the major broadcasting networks (network O&O's highlighted in bold) include KDFW 4 (Fox), KXAS 5 (NBC), WFAA 8 (ABC) (which for many years was owned by Belo alongside the Morning News), KTVT 11 (CBS), KERA 13 (PBS), KUVN 23 (UNI), KDFI 27 (MNTV), KDAF 33 (The CW), and KXTX 39 (TMD). KTXA 21 and KFAA 29 are an independent stations; KTXA \nwas previously affiliated with the now-defunct UPN network.\nOver 101 radio stations operate within range of Dallas. The city of Dallas operates WRR 101.1 FM, the area's main classical music station, from city offices in Fair Park. Its original sister station, licensed as WRR-AM in 1921, is the oldest commercially operated radio station in Texas and the second-oldest in the United States, after KDKA (AM) in Pittsburgh. KKDA-FM (K104), an urban contemporary station, and KRNB (Smooth R&B 105.7), an urban adult contemporary station, are owned independently by Service Broadcasting Corporation.\nBecause of the city's central geographical position and lack of nearby mountainous terrain, high-power class A medium-wave stations KRLD and WBAP can broadcast as far as southern Canada at night and can be used for emergency messages when broadcasting is down in other major metropolitan areas in the United States.\nSlavic Voice of America media group serves Russian-speaking Americans out of Dallas. Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation (HBC), the largest company in the Spanish-language radio station business, is based in Dallas. In 2003, HBC was acquired by Univision and became Univision Radio Inc., but the radio company remains headquartered in the city.\nThe Real Housewives of Dallas, abbreviated RHOD, was an American reality television series that aired on Bravo from 2016 to 2021. It is the ninth installment of The Real Housewives franchise, lasting five seasons and focused on the personal and professional lives of several women living in the city  Notable alumni was Brandi Redmond, cheerleader for the Dallas Cowboys, model and actress Tiffany Hendra, and seasoned reality television personality Leeanne Locken. Other stars included Cary Deuber, Stephanie Hollman, D'Andra Simmons, Kameron Westcott, Kary Brittingham and Tiffany Moon. The show highlighted Dallas culture, specifically the city's charity scene.","score":38.92137578884761,"links":[]},{"source":"web_1779060034.hat","text":"Menu Using App Router Features available in /app Latest Version 16.2.6 For an index of Next.js documentation , see /docs/llms.txt . Next.js Docs Welcome to the Next.js documentation! What is Next.js? Next.js is a React framework for building full-stack web applications. You use React Components to build user interfaces, and Next.js for additional features and optimizations. It also automatically configures lower-level tools like bundlers and compilers. You can instead focus on building your product and shipping quickly. Whether you're an individual developer or part of a larger team, Next.js can help you build interactive, dynamic, and fast React applications. How to use the docs The docs are organized into 3 sections: Getting Started : Step-by-step tutorials to help you create a new application and learn the core Next.js features. Guides : Tutorials on specific use cases, choose what's relevant to you. API Reference : Detailed technical reference for every feature. Use the sidebar to navigate through the sections, or search ( Ctrl+K or Cmd+K ) to quickly find a page. App Router and Pages Router Next.js has two different routers: App Router : The newer router that supports new React features like Server Components. Pages Router : The original router, still supported and being improved. At the top of the sidebar, you'll notice a dropdown menu that allows you to switch between the App Router and the Pages Router docs. React version handling The App Router and Pages Router handle React versions differently: App Router : Uses React canary releases built-in, which include all the stable React 19 changes, as well as newer features being validated in frameworks, prior to a new React release. Pages Router : Uses the React version installed in your project's package.json . This approach ensures new React features work reliably in the App Router while maintaining backwards compatibility for existing Pages Router applications. Pre-requisite knowledge Our documentation assumes some familiarity with web development. Before getting started, it'll help if you're comfortable with: HTML CSS JavaScript React If you're new to React or need a refresher, we recommend starting with our React Foundations course , and the Next.js Foundations course that has you building an application as you learn. Accessibility For the best experience when using a screen reader, we recommend using Firefox and NVDA, or Safari and VoiceOver. Join our Community If you have questions about anything related to Next.js, you're always welcome to ask our community on GitHub Discussions , Discord , X (Twitter) , and Reddit . Next Steps Create your first application and learn the core Next.js features. Getting Started Learn how to create full-stack web applications with the Next.js App Router. Was this helpful? supported. Send","score":37.12400931168676,"links":[]},{"source":"web_1779060034.hat","text":"Menu Using App Router Features available in /app Latest Version 16.2.6 This page is also available as Markdown at /docs/app/getting-started.md . For an index of Next.js documentation , see /docs/llms.txt . Copy page Getting Started Last updated May 13, 2026 Welcome to the Next.js documentation! This Getting Started section will help you create your first Next.js app and learn the core features you'll use in every project. Pre-requisite knowledge Our documentation assumes some familiarity with web development. Before getting started, it'll help if you're comfortable with: HTML CSS JavaScript React If you're new to React or need a refresher, we recommend starting with our React Foundations course , and the Next.js Foundations course that has you building an application as you learn. Next Steps Installation Learn how to create a new Next.js application with the `create-next-app` CLI, and set up TypeScript, ESLint, and Module Path Aliases. Project Structure Learn the folder and file conventions in Next.js, and how to organize your project. Layouts and Pages Learn how to create your first pages and layouts, and link between them with the Link component. Linking and Navigating Learn how the built-in navigation optimizations work, including prefetching, prerendering, and client-side navigation, and how to optimize navigation for dynamic routes and slow networks. Server and Client Components Learn how you can use React Server and Client Components to render parts of your application on the server or the client. Fetching Data Learn how to fetch data and stream content that depends on data. Mutating Data Learn how to mutate data using Server Functions and Server Actions in Next.js. Caching Learn how to cache data and UI in Next.js Revalidating Learn how to revalidate cached data using time-based and on-demand strategies. Error Handling Learn how to display expected errors and handle uncaught exceptions. CSS Learn about the different ways to add CSS to your application, including Tailwind CSS, CSS Modules, Global CSS, and more. Image Optimization Learn how to optimize images in Next.js Font Optimization Learn how to optimize fonts in Next.js Metadata and OG images Learn how to add metadata to your pages and create dynamic OG images. Route Handlers Learn how to use Route Handlers Proxy Learn how to use Proxy Deploying Learn how to deploy your Next.js application. Upgrading Learn how to upgrade your Next.js application to the latest version or canary. Was this helpful? supported. Send","score":37.12400931168676,"links":[]},{"source":"wiki_dallas.hat","text":"Notable people\nInternational relations\nThe city of Dallas has worked to build Sister & Friendship City relationships around the globe. These relationships help create and strengthen partnerships between Dallas and the international community. The program aims to build global cooperation at the municipal level by promoting cultural understanding and stimulating economic development between Dallas and its foreign counterparts.\n\nSister cities\nDallas's sister cities are:\n\nFriendship cities\nDallas has friendly relations with:\n\nSee also\nList of museums in North Texas\nNational Register of Historic Places listings in Dallas County, Texas\nTexas Triangle\nUSS Dallas, 3 ships\n2015 attack on Dallas police\n\nNotes\nReferences\nFurther reading\nExternal links\n\nOfficial website\nDallas from the Handbook of Texas Online\nDallas Public Library Search Results for Dallas County\n\n--- NEXT ARTICLE ---","score":29.280917192565077,"links":[]},{"source":"web_1779060034.hat","text":"Menu Using App Router Features available in /app Latest Version 16.2.6 This page is also available as Markdown at /docs/app/guides.md . For an index of Next.js documentation , see /docs/llms.txt . Copy page Guides Last updated May 13, 2026 AI Coding Agents Learn how to configure your Next.js project so AI coding agents use up-to-date documentation instead of outdated training data. Analytics Measure and track page performance using Next.js Speed Insights Authentication Learn how to implement authentication in your Next.js application. Backend for Frontend Learn how to use Next.js as a backend framework Caching (Previous Model) Learn how to cache and revalidate data using fetch options, unstable_cache, and route segment configs for projects not using Cache Components. CDN Caching Learn how CDN caching works with Next.js, including what works today, cache variability, and the direction toward pathname-based cache keying. CI Build Caching Learn how to configure CI to cache Next.js builds Content Security Policy Learn how to set a Content Security Policy (CSP) for your Next.js application. CSS-in-JS Use CSS-in-JS libraries with Next.js Custom Server Start a Next.js app programmatically using a custom server. Data Security Learn the built-in data security features in Next.js and learn best practices for protecting your application's data. Debugging Learn how to debug your Next.js application with VS Code, Chrome DevTools, or Firefox DevTools. Deploying to Platforms Understand which Next.js features require specific platform capabilities and how to choose the right deployment target. Draft Mode Next.js has draft mode to toggle between static and dynamic pages. You can learn how it works with App Router here. Environment Variables Learn to add and access environment variables in your Next.js application. Forms Learn how to create forms in Next.js with React Server Actions. How Revalidation Works A deep dive into how Next.js revalidates cached content, including the tag system, cache consistency, and multi-instance coordination. ISR Learn how to create or update static pages at runtime with Incremental Static Regeneration. Instrumentation Learn how to use instrumentation to run code at server startup in your Next.js app Internationalization Add support for multiple languages with internationalized routing and localized content. JSON-LD Learn how to add JSON-LD to your Next.js application to describe your content to search engines and AI. Lazy Loading Lazy load imported libraries and React Components to improve your application's loading performance. Development Environment Learn how to optimize your local development environment with Next.js. Next.js MCP Server Learn how to use Next.js MCP support to allow coding agents access to your application state MDX Learn how to configure MDX and use it in your Next.js apps. Memory Usage Optimize memory used by your application in development and production. Migrating Learn how to migrate from popular frameworks to Next.js Migrating to Cache Components Learn how to migrate from route segment configs to Cache Components in Next.js. Multi-tenant Learn how to build multi-tenant apps with the App Router. Multi-zones Learn how to build micro-frontends using Next.js Multi-Zones to deploy multiple Next.js apps under a single domain. OpenTelemetry Learn how to instrument your Next.js app with OpenTelemetry. Package Bundling Learn how to analyze and optimize your application's server and client bundles with the Next.js Bundle Analyzer for Turbopack, and the `@next/bundle-analyzer` plugin for Webpack. PPR Platform Guide A guide for platform engineers on implementing PPR support, from basic origin rendering to optimized CDN integration. Prefetching Learn how to configure prefetching in Next.js Preserving UI state Learn how React's Activity component preserves UI state across navigations in Next.js and how to control what resets. Preventing Flash Learn how to correct server-rendered content before the browser paints, avoiding visible flash when the page hydrates. Production Recommendations to ensure the best performance and user experience before taking your Next.js application to production. PWAs Learn how to build a Progressive Web Application (PWA) with Next.js. Public pages Learn how to build public, \"static\" pages that share data across users, such as landing pages, list pages (products, blogs, etc.), marketing and news sites. Redirecting Learn the different ways to handle redirects in Next.js. Rendering Philosophy Learn how Next.js treats static and dynamic rendering as a spectrum at the component level, and what this means for deployment. Sass Style your Next.js application using Sass. Scripts Optimize 3rd party scripts with the built-in Script component. Self-Hosting Learn how to self-host your Next.js application on a Node.js server, Docker image, or static HTML files (static exports). SPAs Next.js fully supports building Single-Page Applications (SPAs). Static Exports Next.js enables starting as a static site or Single-Page Application (SPA), then later optionally upgrading to use features that require a server. Streaming Learn how streaming works in Next.js and how to use it to progressively render UI as data becomes available. Tailwind CSS v3 Style your Next.js Application using Tailwind CSS v3 for broader browser support. Testing Learn how to set up Next.js with four commonly used testing tools — Cypress, Playwright, Vitest, and Jest. Third Party Libraries Optimize the performance of third-party libraries in your application with the `@next/third-parties` package. Upgrading Learn how to upgrade to the latest versions of Next.js. Videos Recommendations and best practices for optimizing videos in your Next.js application. View transitions Learn how to use view transitions to communicate meaning during navigation, loading, and content changes in a Next.js app. Was this helpful? supported. Send","score":27.12400931168676,"links":[]},{"source":"web_1779060046.hat","text":"API Reference Copy page Copy React Reference Overview This section provides detailed reference documentation for working with React. For an introduction to React, please visit the Learn section. The React reference documentation is broken down into functional subsections: React Programmatic React features: Hooks - Use different React features from your components. Components - Built-in components that you can use in your JSX. APIs - APIs that are useful for defining components. Directives - Provide instructions to bundlers compatible with React Server Components. React DOM React DOM contains features that are only supported for web applications (which run in the browser DOM environment). This section is broken into the following: Hooks - Hooks for web applications which run in the browser DOM environment. Components - React supports all of the browser built-in HTML and SVG components. APIs - The react-dom package contains methods supported only in web applications. Client APIs - The react-dom/client APIs let you render React components on the client (in the browser). Server APIs - The react-dom/server APIs let you render React components to HTML on the server. Static APIs - The react-dom/static APIs let you generate static HTML for React components. React Compiler The React Compiler is a build-time optimization tool that automatically memoizes your React components and values: Configuration - Configuration options for React Compiler. Directives - Function-level directives to control compilation. Compiling Libraries - Guide for shipping pre-compiled library code. ESLint Plugin React Hooks The ESLint plugin for React Hooks helps enforce the Rules of React: Lints - Detailed documentation for each lint with examples. Rules of React React has idioms — or rules — for how to express patterns in a way that is easy to understand and yields high-quality applications: Components and Hooks must be pure – Purity makes your code easier to understand, debug, and allows React to automatically optimize your components and hooks correctly. React calls Components and Hooks – React is responsible for rendering components and hooks when necessary to optimize the user experience. Rules of Hooks – Hooks are defined using JavaScript functions, but they represent a special type of reusable UI logic with restrictions on where they can be called. Legacy APIs Legacy APIs - Exported from the react package, but not recommended for use in newly written code. Next Hooks","score":27.12400931168676,"links":[]}]},"metadata":{},"timestamp":"2026-07-08T22:47:06.725Z"}