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ICT-Basic Essential Skills: 6 February 2018

The document provides information on connecting to the internet and using the world wide web. It discusses different types of internet connections like dial-up, broadband, wireless and their speeds. It explains what the internet and world wide web are, how they are structured, and how to access websites and web pages using browsers and URLs. Key terms discussed include IP, ISPs, protocols, domains, files/folders and how client-server model works to access content online.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views

ICT-Basic Essential Skills: 6 February 2018

The document provides information on connecting to the internet and using the world wide web. It discusses different types of internet connections like dial-up, broadband, wireless and their speeds. It explains what the internet and world wide web are, how they are structured, and how to access websites and web pages using browsers and URLs. Key terms discussed include IP, ISPs, protocols, domains, files/folders and how client-server model works to access content online.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LECTURE 5

ICT-Basic Essential Skills


6 February 2018
The Internet &
the World Wide Web
INTERNET

• It is the largest network in the world that connects


hundreds of thousands of individual networks all over
the world.
• The popular term for the Internet is the “information
highway”.
• Rather than moving through geographical space, it
moves your ideas and information through
cyberspace – the space of electronic movement of
ideas and information.
INTERNET
• No one owns it
• It has no formal management organization.
• As it was originally developed by the Department of
defense, this lack of centralization made it less
vulnerable to wartime or terrorist attacks.
• To access the Internet, an existing network need to
pay a small registration fee and agree to certain
standards based on the TCP/IP (Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol) .
The uses of the Internet

• Send e-mail messages.


• Send (upload) or receive (down load) files
between computers.
• Participate in discussion groups, such as
mailing lists and newsgroups.
• Surfing the web.
Exploring the Cyberspace
• How does one become a participant in the network of networks?

• To connect to the internet, you need 3 things

• access device - computer with a modem, cable modem, etc.

• means of connection - telephone line, cable hookup, or


wireless capabilities

• Internet access provider - a commercial online service


provider, or wireless internet service provider
Connecting to the Internet

• Bandwidth or channel capacity - how much data -


text, voice, video & so on - can be sent through a
communications channel in a given amount of time

• Broadband - high speed connections - include


various kinds of high speed wired connections

• coaxial & fiber optic, DSL, cable, satellite & others


Connecting to the Internet
• The Physical connection

• Wired

• Wireless

• Data Transmission speeds

• download - from a website to your own PC

• upload - from your PC to a website


Narrowband (Dial-Up
Modem)
• Low speed but inexpensive

• dial-up connections - use of telephone modems to


connect computers to the internet

• maximum speed of 56 kbps - to download a 16MB


movie via a 56 kbps dial-up connection is about
31min & 45sec
High-Speed Phone Lines

• T1 Line a fiber-optic or copper line separate from the


phone line

• transmission rate of 1.5 to 6 Mbps

• leased by corporate, government & academic sites

• T3 Line
Problem for Telephone
Internet Connections
• The Last Mile. The medium that connects homes
and business to the central switching office, the local
loop

• the passing back and forth of data between you and


the telephone switching station

• ex 130 million phone lines that use 65 million kms of


copper wire
Cable modem: Close
competitor to DSL
• Cable modem connects a PC to a cable-TV system
that offers an Internet connection

• Cable connections can be faster than DSL and more


popular in advanced countries

• DSL can download video 6min video in 11mins; Cable


can do it 2mins

• outgoing transmission rate 1.4 Mbps; incoming up to


30 Mbps
Satellite Wireless
Connections
• Satellite connections provide internet access without
telephone lines or cables but involves connection
delay

• Receives & sends data from a communications


satellite, a space station that transmits radio waves
called microwaves from earth based stations.
Other Wireless
Connections: Wi-Fi, 3G, 4G

• Wireless networks which uses radio waves to transmit


data

• Newer mobile wireless connections are becoming the


most popular type of connectivity
Wi-Fi
• Wi-Fi (Wireless Fidelity). is the name given to any of
several standards - 802.11 - set by the IEEE (Institute
of Electric & Electronic Engineers) for wireless
transmission

• access point - a station that sends and receives


data to and from Wi-Fi network

• hotspots - public access to Wi-Fi networks


3G/4G Wireless

• 3G stands for “third generation” defined as high-


speed wireless technology that does not need access
points because it uses the existing cellphone system

• 4G stands for “fourth generation” successor to 3G


and 2G, with the aim to provide a wide range of data
rates up to ultra-broadband (gigabit-speed) Internet
access to mobile as well as stationery users
Internet Access Providers
(ISPs): 3 Kinds
• Internet Service Provider (ISP) is a local, regional, or
national organization that provides access to the
internet for a fee.

• Commercial Online Services is a members-only


company that provides not only Internet access but
other specialised content

• Wireless Internet Service Providers enables users


with computers containing wireless modems - laptops,
smartphones, etc
Who Runs the Internet?
• Several global and US organisations establish standards

• ISOC Intl Board of Trustees to provide leadership in


addressing issues that confront the future of the Internet,
infrastructure standards

• June 1998 - Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and


Numbers (ICANN) established to regular human-friendly
internet domain names - address ending with .com, .org.,
.net, etc.

• fraud prevention, privacy & intellectual-property protection


How to access the Internet?
• To access the Internet, an existing network need to
pay a small registration fee and agree to certain
standards based on the TCP/IP (Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol) reference model.
• Each organization pays for its own networks and its
own telephone bills, but those costs usually exist
independent of the internet.
• The regional Internet companies route and forward all
traffic, and the cost is still only that of a local
telephone call.
Internet Service Provider (ISP)

• A commercial organization with permanent


connection to the Internet that sells temporary
connections to subscribers.
• Examples:
• Prodigy, America Online, Microsoft network,
AT&T Networks.
The World Wide Web

• World Wide Web brought multimedia to the Internet

• The part of the internet that enables you to access


more than just text, but also art, audio, video, and
animation and engage in interactive games
What is Web?
• The Web (World Wide Web) consists of information
organized into Web pages containing text and graphic
images.
• It contains hypertext links, or highlighted keywords and
images that lead to related information.
• A collection of linked Web pages that has a common
theme or focus is called a Web site.
• The main page that all of the pages on a particular Web
site are organized around and link back to is called the
site’s home page.
How to access the Web?
• Once you have your Internet connection, then
you need special software called a browser to
access the Web.
• Web browsers are used to connect you to remote
computers, open and transfer files, display text
and images.
• Web browsers are specialized programs.
• Examples of Web browser: Google Chrome,
Mozilla Firefox, Safari, Internet Explorer.
Client/Server Structure of the Web

• Web is a collection of files that reside on computers,


called Web servers, that are located all over the world
and are connected to each other through the Internet.
• When you use your Internet connection to become part of
the Web, your computer becomes a Web client in a
worldwide client/server network.
• A Web browser is the software that you run on your
computer to make it work as a web client.
The Face of the Web: Browsers,
Websites, & Web Pages
• Browsers. Software for surfing the web

• A software that enables you to find and access the


various parts of the web

• allows you to move around the web and to access,


and post information including multimedia

• Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer,


Safari, etc.
The Face of the Web: Browsers,
Websites, & Web Pages

• Website. is a location on a particular computer on


the web that has a unique address (called URL -
Uniform Resource Locator)

• the location of a computer or group of computers


somewhere on the InternetThe Face of the Web:
Browsers, Websites, & Web Pages
The Face of the Web: Browsers,
Websites, & Web Pages

• Webpages. is a document on the World Wide Web


that can include text, pictures, sound and video

• Website is composed of web page or collection of


related web pages

• Home page the starting point, the main page, of a


website that contains links to other pages at the site
How the browser finds
things: URLs
• URLs - (Uniform Resource Locators) or web
addresses

• the string of characters that points to a specific piece


of information anywhere on the web

• URL consists of (1) web protocol, (2) domain name or


web server name, (3) directory name (or folder) on
that server, (4) the file

• http://www.nps.gov/yose/home.html
• The protocol: http:// is a set of communication rules
for exchanging information.

• HTTP developed by Tim Berners-Lee stands for


HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), the
communications rules that allow browsers to
connect with web servers

• The domain name (web server name):


www.nps.gov is simply a location on the internet, the
particular web server

• tells the location and the type of address


• The directory name: yose/ is the name on the
server for the directory or folder, from which your
browser needs to pull the file

• The file name and extension: home.html the


particular page or document that you are seeking
Web Portals: Starting Points
for Finding Information

• Web Portals can act as organisers for web activities,


a type of gateway website that function as an “anchor
site”, a major starting point, for users when
connecting to the internet

• Yahoo, Google, Bing (MSN before), Lycos, AOL,


others
Web Search Techniques
• Choose your search terms well, and watch your spelling

• Type words in lowercase

• Use phrases with quotation marks rather than separate words

• Put unique words first in a phrase

• Use Boolean operators - AND, OR, and NOT

• Use inclusion and exclusion operators ( +, -)

• Use wildcards - asterisk (*), question mark (?)

• Read the Help or Search Tip section

• Try an alternate general search site or a specific search site

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