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Introducing the Internet Source: Learning to Use the Internet Introducing the Internet • • • • • A Description of the Internet Internet Services and Tools How the Internet Works How the Internet Developed Explanation of Internet Domain Names and Addresses A Description of the Internet The Internet is: • millions of people communicating electronically on a one-to-one basis or in groups to share ideas and information. • a vast collection of information on a wide variety of topics that can be searched and retrieved electronically. A Description of the Internet (Cont.) • A network of tens of thousands of computer networks that connect over a million computer systems. These networks communicate by exchanging data according to the same rules, but they may be using different technologies. Internet Services • Electronic Mail (e-mail) • Telnet • FTP Electronic mail (e-mail) • Lets you send and receive messages in electronic form. • These messages can be text, spreadsheets, wordprocessing documents, images, programs, etc. • Can join interest or discussion groups and mailing lists. • Example of an e-mail address: [email protected] where somebody is the user name, lib.umich.edu is the domain name of the site used. Telnet • Allows you to connect and log into a remote computer. • You can use it to access any of the public services or tools at the remote site. • Can be used for access to libraries, databases, or other Internet services. FTP • File Transfer Protocol • Lets you transfer files from one computer on the Internet to another. • Using anonymous FTP one can retrieve files without being a registered user on another computer system. Internet Tools • • • • • Hytelnet Archie Gopher WAIS World Wide Web (WWW) Hytelnet • A tool for working with Telnet. • Using Hytelnet you may get an organized collection of sites and services available through Telnet. • You browse the collection using a hypertext interface. Archie • Lets you search the archives of files accessible by anonymous FTP. • Search is done using the complete or partial name of a file and the answer is the Internet address and location of files. Gopher • A menu-based document delivery system. • Provides access to information such as files, documents, address books, and images. • Also allows access to ftp, telnet, and searchable databases. • Veronica is a tool to search Gopher menus for resources throughout the Internet. WAIS • Wide Area Information System • A system for searching and retrieving items from databases. • Search is done using one or more keywords. The result is a list of articles arranged in a list. These articles you can view on the screen, save to a file, or send to an Internet address via e-mail. WWW • World Wide Web • A single means of access to almost everything available through the Internet: services, resources, tools, and information. • Gives hypertext, and hypermedia access (i.e. links to other pages, documents, etc.) • Programs that work with the WWW are the Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator and before these Lynx, and the Mosaic. How the Internet Works • The Internet is a network connecting thousands of other computer networks. • Each network has a unique address, and each computer connected to a network has its own address. Examples of addresses: 194.65.245.76 or sage.my.edu. • Computer systems within one network can exchange information with computers on other networks. How the Internet Works (Cont.) • The rules that govern this form of communication are called protocols. • Two protocols used are Internet Protocol (IP) and Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) • Packets of characters (bytes), with the receiver’s address, carry information on the Internet. These packets are passed from one network to another until they reach their destination. --> The Internet is a packet-switched network. How the Internet Works (Cont.) • The networks on the Internet use a hardware device called router to communicate with other networks. • The router accepts packets addressed to it and passes on packets addressed to other networks. How the Internet Developed • In the late 1960s the United States Department of Defense funded the ARPANET project. • ARPA (Advanced Research Projects Agency). • ARPANET linked researchers at universities, research laboratories, and some military labs. • NSFNET was developed to connect supercomputer centers in the United States. • The network kept expanding with more and more computer connections in U.S. and overseas. How the Internet Developed (Cont.) • Other commercial networks and free-nets were developed. • The Internet has grown very rapidly into something that involves millions of people worldwide. Internet Domain Names and Addresses • An address is assigned to each network, and each computer within a network gets an address based on the network’s address. Example: 195.65.245.76 • From left to right, a first group of numbers identifies a network (e.g. 195.65.245), and a second group a specific host or computer system (e.g. 76). This numeric address is called an IP (Internet Protocol) address. Internet Domain Names and Addresses (Cont.) • Domain names may be assigned to the numbers in the IP address. Example: sage. myu.edu where sage is the computer name, and myu.edu the network name. The last 3 characters (edu, com, gov, mil, net, org) usually denote the type of organization. • Documents are retrieved from the WWW using a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) address. Internet Domain Names and Addresses (Cont.) • Example of a URL address: http: www.ee.ic.ac.uk/misc/country-codes.html • General form of a URL address: service://domain-name-of-site-supplyingservice/full-path-name-of-item (http stands for hypertext transport protocol)