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Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT A. History and development of the Internet Notes 1 – A brief History of the Internet and Definitions The Internet is really a very large wide area network (WAN) connecting computers and networks around the world. Millions of computers are connected by telephone lines, cable lines, and satellites. The Internet started in the 1960’s by the US Defense department. The purpose was to set up a communication link that could survive a nuclear war or natural disaster. This was done by setting up links between some government and universities throughout various locations in the US. This consisted of a backbone of cables to handle the traffic among the network. Originally, the Internet was known as ARPANet (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network). Users of ARPANet used the network to share scientific and engineering information. People started to find additional uses for the network – the most popular being e-mail. This encouraged the expansion of the network into Europe in the 1970’s and it continued to grow in use into the 1980’s In 1983, ARPNet split up into 2 parts – ARPANet and MILNet. ARPANET continued to be used by academics and universities and MILNet was used by the military. By the mid 1980’s, the speed of the ARPNet was not sufficient to handle the communication traffic demand of its users. At this time a new network was created by The National Science Foundation called NSFNet. NSFNet connected supercomputers in various research and academic facilities. The purpose was then to easily exchange information. ARPNet and NSFNet were linked together but the faster speed of NSFNet resulted in ARPNet being fully replaced by NSFNet by the early 1990’s. The growth of the PC market and the interest of people to be able to use computers to communicate resulted in rapid growth of the Internet during the 1990’s. Since NSFNet was restricted to academic users it was up to telecommunication companies such as Bell, AT&T, and Nortel to respond to this demand by building new high speed backbones. 1 Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT B. These companies used the same communication language that was used by ARPNet and NSFNet, referred to as TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) What is the WWW The birth of the World Wide Web (WWW) and the development of Web browser software led to incredible growth of the Internet in the 1990’s. Tim Berners-Lee developed the WWW in the early 1980’s at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN) in Switzerland. The WWW is more commonly known as the Web The WWW is a collection of millions of hypertext documents. Hypertext documents are most commonly written in Web authoring language called HTML (Hypertext Markup Language). These documents can contain built in applications and links to databases in addition to text, sound, graphics, and animation. Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is the set of rules that control how documents written in HTML are going to be interpreted and displayed through a browser. A Web browser is a program that will interpret hypertext documents on the Web and display them on the screen. C. Anatomy of a Web Site Address A Web site address is also referred to as a universal (or uniform) resource locator or URL. Punctuation “colon slash slash” Domain Name Path and file name (optional) http://www.myaddress.com/people/btt.html Transfer protocol. Hostname (optional). Second-level Domain Top-level Domain This is the most common protocol This is the server name, which is often www This is usually the 2 organization’s name as This describes the type of domain. Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT D. Internet Search Engines and search tips Notes A search engine is a computer program that electronically searches the Web looking for HTML documents. These programs are referred to as Web crawlers, spiders, or indexing robots. A search engine works by searching “key words” that you enter and looks for these in web pages. The search engine then prioritizes the results and displays the address of web pages that contain your key words. There are two types of search engines; Single-search engines such as Google, Yahoo, AltaVista Meta-search engines that take your search request and in turn submit it to numerous search engines simultaneously. These include Dogpile and metacrawler. Search Tips The Five-Step Search Strategy We Recommend Step #1. Analyze your topic to decide where to begin Click here for a printable FORM you may use to Analyze Your Topic (pdf file). PDF files are supported in Netscape 4.x and some other browsers. To view, search, or print the PDF files, you will need to use Adobe® Acrobat® Reader software, which is available free from Adobe if you need it. have distinctive words or phrases? methernitha, unique meaning "affirmative action", specific, accepted meaning in word cluster have NO distinctive words or phrases you can think of? You have only common or general terms that get the "wrong" pages. "order out of chaos", used in too many contexts to be useful sundiata, retrieves a myth, a rock group, a person, etc. seek an overview of a broad topic? victorian literature, alternative energy sources Does your topic... specify a narrow aspect of a broad or common topic? automobile recyclability, want current research, future designs, not how to recycle or oil recycling or other community efforts have synonymous, equivalent terms, or variant spellings or endings that need to be included? echinoderm OR echinoidea OR "sea urchin", any may be in useful pages "cold fusion energy" OR "hydrogen energy", some use one term, some the other; you want both, although not precisely equivalent millennium OR millennial OR millenium OR millenial OR "year 2000", etc. Pages you want may contain any or all. Make you feel confused? Don't really know much about the topic yet? Need guidance? 3 BTT Unit – The Internet and Networks Step #2. Pick the right starting place using this table: Specialized YOUR Subject Databases Find an TOPIC'S Search Engines Directories "Invisible Expert FEATURES: Web" Enclose phrases in Distinctive or " ". Search the broader word or Test run your concept, what your phrase? word or phrase in term is "about." Google. Use more than one NO distinctive Try to find term or phrase in " words or distinctive terms in Want data? " to get fewer phrases? Subject Directories Facts? Look for a results. Statistics? specialized Look for a All of subject Seek an NOT specialized Subject directory on overview? RECOMMENDED Directory focused something? One of many your topic. on your topic like things? E-mail the Narrow aspect Look for a Schedules? author of a of broad or AltaVista's Boolean Directory focused Maps? good page common searching on the broad Look for a you find. topic? subject. specialized Ask a Choose search database on discussion Synonyms, engines with the Invisible group or equivalent NOT Boolean OR, or Web. expert. terms, RECOMMENDED Truncation, or Field Hard to predict Never hurts variants limiting. what you might to seek help. Look for a Gateway find. Page (Subject Guide). Confused? NOT Try an Need more RECOMMENDED encyclopedia in a information? Virtual Library. Ask at a library reference desk. LUCK Always on your side. Keep your mind open. Learn as you search. Step #3. Learn as you go & VARY your approach with what you learn. Don't assume you know what you want to find. Look at search results and see what you might use in addition to what you've thought of. Step #4. Don't bog down in any strategy that doesn't work. Switch from search engines to directories and back. Find specialized directories on your topic. Think about possible databases and look for them. Step #5. Return to previous strategies better informed. Search Strategies We Do NOT Recommend Because of their inefficiency and often haphazard and frustrating results, we do not recommend either of the following two approaches to finding Web documents: 4 Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT Browsing searchable directories. If you can find a search box, search a directory. BROWSING is a sometimes fun rarely as efficient. The term "directories" refers here to any collection of web resources organized into subject categories or some other breakdown appropriate to the content (Subject Directories or directories of specialized databases or of gateway pages). Browsing locates documents by your trying to match your topic in first the top, broadest layer of a subject hierarchy, then by choosing narrower sub-subjectcategories in the hierarchy that you hope will lead to your target. Browsing encounters the difficulty of guessing under which subject category your topic is classified. The taxonomy in every directory differs, making browsing inconsistent from one search tool to another. The category "health" may contain documents on medicine, homeopathy, psychiatry, and fitness in one directory. In another "medicine" may include health, mental health, and alternative medicine, but not the term psychiatry and may classify fitness only under "lifestyle." Searching (typing keywords in a search box) retrieves occurrences of your words no matter where they may be classified by subject. Use broad terms in searching any directory. Following links to sites recommended by heavy use or commercial interest. Often in search engine results, you will see links to sites that are selected based on how often they are visited by others, or based on fees paid to the browser. Or you may see recommended "cool" sites. Use these with caution! Others may visit sites for reasons having no relation to your information interests, and the best sites for you may still be largely undiscovered by the vast public searching the Web. Taste varies and should vary. Make your own evaluations. Table Matching Your Search Needs with the Features Search Engines Offer The purpose of thinking about your topic before you start searching is to determine what terms to search for and what features you need to search successfully. The table below lists on the left features of many search inquiries. Use it to determine which features your searches need. On the left, the table describes search tool features designed to support each of the search needs listed on the left. The links take you to the table of search engines -- so you can pick a search engine with the features you need. Matching Search Tools Features worth learning and using Features of your search inquiry PHRASE SEARCHING is a feature you Are you looking for a proper name or a distinct want in every search tools you choose. phrase ? Requires your terms all to appear in exactly the order you enter The name of an organization or society or them. movement Enclose the phrase in double A proper name or an individual quotations " " A distinctive string of words generally Examples: associated with your topic "affirmative action" "world health organization" "a person's name" Can you think of an organization, proper name, or phrase to search for? It might help zoom in on the In , capitalizing initial letters will cause the terms to be searched as a phrase: pages you want. World Health Organization Are some of your terms common words with many meanings and contexts ? Children in conjunction with television and 5 BOOLEAN AND will help: children AND television AND violence journalism AND ethics AND Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT also violence Censorship as an aspect of ethics in journalism censorship Google and AllTheWeband most other search engines put AND in between words automatically (by default): children television violence journalism ethics censorship Do you anticipate lots of search results with terms you do not want ? BOOLEAN AND NOT will help: "biomedical engineering" AND cancer AND NOT "Department Your search for biomedical engineering and of" AND NOT "School of" cancer brings you lots of academic or its -EXCLUDES near equivalent: programs, and you want research reports. "biomedical engineering" So you try to exclude documents containing cancer -"Department of" Department of or School of "School of" BOOLEAN OR will help: (women OR females) AND networking (Sarajevo OR Sarayevo) AND peace Are there synonyms, spelling variations, or (literature OR litterature) AND foreign spellings for some of your terms? (French or francaise) In Google, capitalize OR (no need to type "and"): women, females with networking peace sarajevo OR sarayevo Sarajevo, Sarayevo with peace literature OR litterature french literature, litterature with French, francaise OR francaise In AllTheWeb, use parentheses and omit the OR: peace (sarajevo sarayevo) (literature litterature) (french francaise) Are you looking for home pages and/or other documents primarily about your term(s)? The home page of the American Dietetic Association Pages primarily about Affirmative Action Are you looking for terms with many possible endings ? Feminism, feminist, feminine Children, child 6 LIMIT TO TITLE FIELD IN DOCUMENTS title:"American Dietetic Association" title:"affirmative action" In Google, use allintitle:"affirmative action" TRUNCATION permits retrieving all these variations in one search term (ONLY IN ALTA VISTA): femini* matches feminine, feminist, feminism, etc. child* retrieves child and children Some systems search word ending variants automatically. See the specific instructions for each of the recommended search tools. Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT E. Computer Networks Notes Computer Network 1. Access to Information By networking computers, information can be transmitted directly from one computer to another. Networking allows many people to share files and software in several ways. o All users on a network can access software from one central location. o All users on a network can access shared files 2. Access to Equipment Computers to a network can share hardware making it more practical and cost effective. For example, networks in this class allow you to share o A printer o An Internet connection 3. Types of Network A local area network (LAN) consists of a group of networked computers that are located in one building. For example, the computers in this school are networked together and therefore it is a LAN. A wide area network (WAN) is a group of networked computers located in a variety of locations in a large geographic area. For example, the computers in this school are connected to computers in the school board. Other school’s computers are also connected to the school board network. Together these constitute a WAN. The Internet is also a WAN. 7 Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT SCHOOL BOARD SERVER (WAN) Other Schools LAN JMSS LAN Classrooms Comp Labs INTERNET Classrooms Comp Labs Library Library 8 BTT Unit – The Internet and Networks A Client/Server Network The SERVER is a powerful computer that handles all the networks shared resources The HUB is the central device where all the nodes and peripherals connect so they can communicate with one another Each client computer (or node) is connected by a cable. Each computer also contains a Network Interface Card (NIC) 9 Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT F. Computer viruses and security issues Notes – Computer Viruses Computer viruses are programs that insert themselves into program files and boot sectors (the boot sector is the area of the disk that contains the programs needed to start and operate your computer). Viruses are activated when you run an infected program. They immediately start copying themselves by looking for new files and boot sectors to infect. Just like an illness, viruses vary in how sick they will make your computer. Some are harmless; others are just a nuisance such as causing a message to appear on your screen, while others may destroy your hard drive and even your computers motherboard bios. The most common ways that viruses can get into your system are o Exchange of portable media storage devices (ie. CD’s, flash/USB memory) o Internet and e-mail o LAN o Mischievous people who might have access to your computer Computer Security Computers help us keep in touch with others and share information by allowing the outside world into our homes and offices. This is good as long as we know who we are talking to and sharing information. However, some bad people may use the opportunity for illegal or inappropriate purpose. To ensue that information remains private and to avoid being the victim of cyber crime you should: Choose a password that is easy for you to remember but not easy for someone else to guess. Combination of letters, numbers, and special characters Do not share your password with anyone Change your password regularly Do not transmit confidential information over the Internet unless it is necessary. If you must do so, make sure your browser or program is using data encryption. If you are connected on the Internet for long periods or using high-speed connections, then a firewall (hardware and/or software) should be used Do not store confidential files on shared computers 10 Unit – The Internet and Networks BTT When you have visitors, turn off the monitor to discourage casual snooping. Similarly, in the office try to avoid placing your computer where it is in view of others. When you buy new equipment, do not place the packaging outside in the curb where everyone can see. This is a possibly invitation for thieve. G. Ethics and the Computer Personal Ethics Ethics is the moral principles which determine the rightness or wrongness of a particular act or activities. Ethical has to do with choosing a right action over a wrong action. Unethical has to do with intentionally acting in a bad or wrong way. Business World and Ethics Businesses are made up of people who all have different backgrounds and different moral beliefs (values). Today, most Canadians believe that people in business have a “social responsibility” – that is in the best interest of society and the company. Many individuals besides owners and shareholders have a stake in what businesses do – employees, customers, special interests groups (ex. Greenpeace), the community, etc. These stakeholders watch to see that business uphold their social responsibilities. Examples include: o Selling products that do not harm people or the environment o Conducting business in a way that has a positive impact, for example, conserving electrical energy during the recent hydro crisis o Treating employees in a fair manner o Not engaging in fraudulent or deceptive practices H Unit Test 11