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The
Internet
| The Internet has been describe in many ways. Some
think of it as a highway while others think of it as a great
marketplace. Most of the metaphors that people use don't quite
paint a clear picture, but do at least incite the imagination
toward its applications. It is largely used to "ship"
data around the world, like a highway of sorts, and it has become
a resource through which every conceivable product may be purchased,
like a marketplace. Technically the Internet is a network of
networks all sharing a common protocol and naming schema. But
since it opens up so many possibilities for telecommunications,
it may be thought of as a community. Interestingly, the way
it is used today is a far cry from its intended purpose. |
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The U.S. Department of Defense laid the foundation of the Internet
roughly 30 years ago with a network called ARPANET. But the general
public didn't use the Internet much until after the development of
the World Wide Web in the early 1990s. As recently as June 1993, there
were only 130 Web sites. Now there are millions. Here's a quick look
at how it all came to be.
In 1957, the United States government formed the Advanced Research
Projects Agency (ARPA), a segment of the Department of Defense charged
with ensuring U.S. leadership in science and technology with military
applications. Just more than a decade later, in 1969, ARPA established
ARPANET, the forerunner of the Internet.
Research and education
ARPANET was a network that connected major computers at the University
of California at Los Angeles, the University of California at Santa
Barbara, Stanford Research Institute, and the University of Utah.
Within a couple of years, several other educational and research institutions
joined the network.
In response to the threat of nuclear attack, ARPANET was designed
to allow continued communication if one or more sites were destroyed.
Unlike today, when millions of people have access to the Internet
from home, work, or their public library, ARPANET served only computer
professionals, engineers, and scientists who knew their way around
its complex workings.
Evolution
Throughout the 1970s, developers created the protocols used to transfer
information over the Internet. By the early 1980s, Usenet newsgroups
and electronic mail had been born. Most users ere affiliated with
universities, although libraries began to connect their catalogs to
the Internet, too. During the late 1980s, developers created indices,
such as Archie and Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), to keep track
of the information on the Internet. To give users a friendly, easy-to-use
interface to work with, the University of Minnesota created its Gopher,
a simple menu system for accessing files, in 1991.
The World Wide Web came into being in 1991, thanks to developer Tim
Berners-Lee and others at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics,
also known as Conseil Européenne pour la Recherche Nucléaire
(CERN). The CERN team created the protocol based on hypertext that
makes it possible to connect content on the Web with hyperlinks. Berners-Lee
now directs the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), a group of industry
and university representatives that oversees the standards of Web
technology.
Early on, the Internet was limited to noncommercial uses because its
backbone was provided largely by the National Science Foundation,
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the U.S. Department
of Energy, and funding came from the government. But as independent
networks began to spring up, users could access commercial Web sites
without using the government-funded network. By the end of 1992, the
first commercial online service provider, Delphi, offered full Internet
access to its subscribers, and several other providers followed.
In June 1993, the Web boasted just 130 sites. By a year later, the
number had risen to nearly 3,000. As of April 1998, there were more
than 2.2 million sites on the Web.
Who's in control here?
No one authority controls the World Wide Web. Today's Web site authoring
tools allow virtually anyone who has access to a computer and the
Internet to post a Web site and contribute to the definition of what
this medium is and what it can do. But the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C) does oversee the development of Web technology.
You shape the Web
According to the developer of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee,
"The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in
which we communicate by sharing information. Its universality is essential:
the fact that a hypertext link can point to anything, be it personal,
local, or global, be it draft or highly polished."
With the development of tools that allow us to create Web sites without
having any knowledge of hypertext markup language (HTML), this dream
is being realized. If you read the "Creating a Web Site"
chapter, you can be one of the forces shaping this "common information
space."
World Wide Web Consortium
Keeping an eye on the standards of Web technology is W3C, formed by
Berners-Lee in 1994. An international group of industry and university
representatives, W3C promotes the Web by developing common protocols
for transmitting information over the Internet. The consortium provides
information, reference code, and prototype and sample applications
to developers and users. It is hosted by the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology's Laboratory for Computer Science in the United States,
the Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique
in Europe, and the Keio University Shonan Fujisawa Campus in Japan.
How do computer connect on the Internet?
Internet computers recognize one another because each is assigned
a special number: an IP Address. An IP address is 32 bits (4 bytes)
wide and may be represented various ways.
IP Address in Binary 11000000 01100110 11111001 00000011
Same in Decimal 3,227,973,891
Same in Hexadecimal 0xC066F903
Same in Dotted-quad 192.102.249.3
All IP address must be unique, hence, all Internet network ID numbers
are managed by a single entity - the Internet Network Information
Center (InterNIC). As shown below, organizations both large and small
can tap into the Internet and identify each computer by "name"
(IP Address).

A connection is made by requesting acknowlegement by a particular
IP Address. Messages will be redirected and routed along the best
available path to travel from source to destination. Technically the
system works very well, but for people, attempting to memorize large
numbers is tedious at best. As a solution, the Domain Name System
was developed.
What are domains?
Domains divide World Wide Web sites into categories based on the nature
of their owner, and they form part of a site's address, or uniform
resource locator (URL). Common top-level domains are:
.com - For commercial enterprises.
.org - For nonprofit organizations.
.net - For networks.
.edu - For educational institutions.
.gov - For government organizations.
.mil - For military services.
.biz - For Business
.us - For United States
.info - For informational web sites
Other popular top level domains are: .tv, .nu, . bz, .cc, .ws |
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