Slides

/slaɪdz/

n. “Where ideas float and presentations come alive.”

Slides, or Google Slides, is a web-based presentation application offered by Google as part of its Workspace suite. It allows users to create, edit, and share slide decks entirely in the cloud, removing the friction of installing software or emailing large attachments. A slide is a canvas for text, images, charts, videos, and embedded media, arranged to communicate ideas efficiently and visually.

Docs

/dɑks/

n. “Collaborate without the chaos of attachments.”

Docs, commonly known as Google Docs, is an online word processor designed to make writing, editing, and sharing documents seamless. Unlike traditional software locked to a single machine, Docs exists entirely in the cloud, allowing multiple people to view and edit a document simultaneously without sending copies back and forth.

Document Object Model

/ˈdiː-ˈoʊ-ˈɛm/

n. “Where the browser meets your code.”

DOM, short for Document Object Model, is a programming interface for HTML and XML documents. It represents the page so scripts can change the document structure, style, and content dynamically. Think of it as a live map of the web page: every element, attribute, and text node is a node in this tree-like structure that can be accessed and manipulated.