Transcript Document

The World Wide Web
The Web
I.
Accessible to anyone with an Internet
connection
Content of the web
II.
A.
B.
C.
D.
Text
Audio
Video
Hyperlinks
1.
2.
E.
III.
Usually blue and underlined
Clicking on a hyperlink takes you to information that is
associated with the current web page.
Multimedia
Began in 1989
III.
The
Web
Began in 1989
A.
Tim Berners-Lee proposed the idea of the web to
CERN
IV. 1993
A.
Web declared open to anyone who would like to use
it.
Marc Andreessen introduced Mosaic™
B.
1.
2.
Mosaic is the first graphical web browser
Later became Netscape.
I.
URL
How URL’s Work
A. Uniform Resource Locator
B. The address for a place on the WWW.
C. Uses names instead of numbers ex. www.yahoo.com
and not 192.168.123.120
II. User types the address (URL) of a web site into
the location area in a browser and presses return.
III. The browser then submits the information to
your internet service provider (ISP) ie Earthlink
or AOL
How URL’s Work
IV.
V.
The information reaches a DNS (domain name server)
The DNS translates the URL into a corresponding IP address.
A.
B.
VI.
VII.
IP stands for Internet Protocol
IP address is a four part number for a specific computer on the internet.
Ex. 12.22.118.3
If there is a corresponding IP then the browser is sent the page
that has been requested.
If there is no IP that matches then an error is sent to the browser
Getting Connected
• Connection types
– Dial up
– Dedicated
• Service Providers
– ISPs can be very large corporations or run by a local
business
• Browser
– There are many to choose from. Each has strengths and
weaknesses.
Getting Connected: Dial-Up
• Dial-up:requires a
modem to connect to
the network through
telephone lines.
• This requires the data
signal to be changed to
and from analogue.
• Speeds up to 56kbps
Getting Connected: Dedicated
• Dedicated Connection: directly connected to the
network. No need for a phone modem nor telephone
company.
• Speeds up to and beyond 1.5 mbps (1500kbps)
Service Providers
Def.- A service provider is a company that gives
you access to the internet. The money you pay
this company allows you to dial-up a connection
to the Internet or provides the equipment that you
use to connect to the Internet.
• Earthlink
• AOL
• NetZero
Browsers
Your window to the Internet.
Browsers
A browser is a program that allows you to view pages on
the WWW. It is the program that reads html so that
you can view the page. You can think of it as a ‘window’
to the WWW.
Netscape
You will find
many of the same
features here.
Instead of
bookmarks, you
have “Favorites.”
There is also a
“History” tab that
will allow you to
see where you
have been.
Internet Explorer
Opera
AOL
NeoPlanet
•
•
•
•
•
•
Back Button-Takes you back to the previous page. If you hold your mouse
down on the back button you get a list of all the websites you have visited
during the current session.
Forward Button- The opposite of the back button.
Home- What ever home page your service provider defaults to. You can change
this.
Location- This is where the address or URL is displayed. You can type an
address here.
Search Button- One way to search, Netscape uses “Excite” as its search engine
Reload Button-Clicking this causes the page to reload and show any changes.
Holding shift and reload tells the browser to skip the cache and get the newest
page on the server.
• Menu items:
– File - print, save
– Edit - copy, paste,search option
– View - The way things look
– Go - back, home, all web sites during current session
– Bookmarks - Add a bookmark, see list of bookmarks, edit
bookmarks.
– Communicator - This will take you to other parts of the program.
– Help
Links
• When ever you click on something, and the
browser takes you somewhere, you have clicked
on a link. A link can be a word, a picture, a button,
etc. Links can be thought of as connections to
associated information.
• Clicking on a link takes you either to another web
page on the same web site, or to another web site
altogether.
Bookmarks
• Bookmarks offer a convenient means to
retrieve pages whose locations (URLs)
you've saved. You store your bookmarks in
a list that's saved on your hard disk. Once
you add a bookmark to your list, the item
stays until you remove it.