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Technology in Action Alan Evans • Kendall Martin Mary Anne Poatsy Eleventh Edition Technology in Action Chapter 3 Using the Internet: Making the Most of the Web’s Resources Chapter Topics • The Internet and How It Works • Communicating and Collaborating on the Web • Web Entertainment • Conducting Business over the Internet: E-Commerce • Accessing and Moving around the Web • Searching the Web Effectively The Internet and How it Works • Internet is a network of networks connecting billions of computers globally The Internet and How it Works: The Origin of the Internet • Developed during Cold War • Established a secure form of military communications • Created a means of communication for all computers The Internet and How it Works: The Origin of the Internet (cont.) • Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) – Vinton Cerf: Program Manager of ARPA – Robert Kahn: Invented TCP / IP • World Wide Web The Internet and How it Works: The Origin of the Internet (cont.) • Web browser • Original browser only displayed text – Mosaic • Released in 1993 • Developed at Natl Ctr for Supercomputing Apps (University of Illionis Urbana-Champaign) – Netscape Navigator evolved from Mosaic The Internet and How it Works: How the Internet Works • Information travels along transmission lines • Internet backbones The Internet and How it Works: How the Internet Works (cont.) • Internet Protocol (IP) address – How computers identify each other – Websites have unique IP addresses – Text versions of IP addresses • www.amazon.com—72.21.211.176 Communicating and Collaborating on the Web • Web 2.0 – Social web – Collaboration tools • Social media – Google Docs, Facebook, Yelp, YouTube, Pinterest – Social networking, blogs, wikis, podcasts, and webcasts – E-mail Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Social Networking • Communicate and share information – Personal • Facebook • Twitter – Business • Filling job positions • LinkedIn • Marketing and communicating Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Social Networking (cont.) • Privacy concerns – Have always been an issue – Most sites have improved policies – Precautions • Keep personal information personal • Know your friends • Do not post information that is often used as security question to verify identity • Use caution when posting images Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Social Networking (cont.) • Employers and colleges – 80% of college admissions officers use Facebook to check out applicants • People have been fired or expelled due to posts – Palace Guards – Cops – Teachers Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Social Networking (cont.) • Questionable content: – Negative comments – Inappropriate content about the poster • Your content is your responsibility Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: E-mail • Primary means of communication • Written message sent or received • Asynchronous • Convenient • Not private Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: E-mail (cont.) • E-mail etiquette – Be concise and to the point – Use spell-check – Avoid texting abbreviations – Include subject line – Include signature line – Include only people who need to receive it Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: E-mail (cont.) • Two different types – Web-based e-mail: Access from web • Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, others – E-mail client: Installed on your computer • Outlook / Thunderbird – Both systems can be used together Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Instant Messaging (IM) • Communicate in real time • Proprietary IM services – AIM, Google Chat, Windows Messenger, Yahoo! Messenger Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Instant Messaging (IM) (cont.) • Facebook – Chat with “friends” • Universal chat services – Trillian, Digsby • Web-based universal chat service – Meebo Communicating and Collaborating on the Web Wikis • Wikipedia uses wiki technology – A website that allows collaborative editing of its content and structure by its users. – Content updated continually • Google Docs has wiki-like features Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Wikis (cont.) • Wikipedia • Citizendium Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Blogs • Short for weblog – Many free sites – Julie and Julia: movie was based on a blog • Video log (vlog) Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Blogs (cont.) • Free blog hosting – Blogger – Wordpress • Splogs – Spam blog – Used to promote other websites Communicating and Collaborating on the Web Podcasts and Webcasts • Podcast • Really Simple Syndication (RSS) • Aggregator Communicating and Collaborating on the Web: Podcasts and Webcasts (cont.) • Webcast – Live or one-time event – Continuously feeds audio and video content – Interactive Web Entertainment • Web entertainment includes: – Streaming audio and video – Internet radio – MP3s – Interactive gaming – smart TV Web Entertainment (cont.) • Multimedia – Graphics – Audio files – Video files Web Entertainment (cont.) • Streaming media – Netflix, Hulu, others: provide video on demand – Internet radio Web Entertainment (cont.) • Plug-in (or player): – Many preinstalled – Download free of charge Web Entertainment (cont.) • Cache • Tips to keep system running efficiently – Delete temporary Internet cache – Click Refresh or F5 key to display most recent website content – Manually clear Internet cache Conducting Business over the Internet: E-Commerce • E-commerce or electronic commerce • Business-to-consumer (B2C) • Business-to-business (B2B) • Consumer-to-consumer (C2C) • Social commerce Conducting Business over the Internet: E-Commerce E-Commerce Safeguards Dig Deeper Discovering the Semantic Web • Semantic web (Web 3.0) – Data defined in such a way as to make it more easily processed by computers – Evolving extension of the web – Example: Siri (on the iPhone) Accessing and Moving around the Web • Web browser • Graphical browsers display: – Text – Pictures – Sound – Video Accessing and Moving around the Web: Web Browsers • Web browser features Accessing and Moving around the Web: URLs, Protocols, and Domain Names • Every website has a unique address • URLs are composed of parts to identify the web document Accessing and Moving around the Web: URLs, Protocols, and Domain Names (cont.) • Examples of protocols – HTTP: Hypertext Transfer Protocol (Standard Internet Protocol) – BitTorrent: Transfers files using a peer-to-peer networking scheme Accessing and Moving around the Web: URLs, Protocols, and Domain Names (cont.) • Domain name – Top-level domain • Top-level domain for countries Accessing and Moving around the Web: Hyperlinks and Beyond (cont.) Accessing and Moving around the Web: Favorites, Live Bookmarks, and Tagging • Favorites feature – Favorites (Internet Explorer and Safari) – Bookmarks (Firefox and Google Chrome) Accessing and Moving around the Web: Favorites, Live Bookmarks, and Tagging (cont.) • Social bookmarking or tagging Searching the Web Effectively • Search engine: Google, Bing, Yahoo • Subject directory: Yahoo • Metasearch engine: Dogpile Searching the Web Effectively: Using Search Engines Effectively • Components of search engines – Spiders: Searches web for data – Indexer: organizes data at search engine website – Search engine: searches data for relevant information • Resulting list appears as list of hits Searching the Web Effectively: Using Search Engines Effectively (cont.) • Search engines – Use unique algorithms to identify data – Same search terms provide different responses depending on search site • Boolean operators – Words such as AND, OR, NOT Searching the Web Effectively: Using Search Engines Effectively (cont.) • Key phrases – Quotation marks to search for exact phrase – Search within a specific site – Use a wild card • * for zero-to-n characters • ? for a single character Searching the Web Effectively: Using Search Engines Effectively (cont.) • Specialty search strategies and services – Search tools in Google • More • Even More – Scholar – Custom Search – Google Shopping – Alerts Searching the Web Effectively: Evaluating Websites • Internet resource considerations – Authority: who created the website – Bias: accepted facts or opinions ? – Relevance: date, application to question – Audience: designed for you or someone else – Links: to / from website to similar The End