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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y
Glossary
of Internet Terms
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A
-
- Address
- Code by which the Internet identifies
you. The format is username@hostname, where username is your
username, login name, or account number, and hostname is the
name of the computer or Internet provider you use. The hostname may
be a few words strung together with periods.
- Anonymous FTP
- A way to use the FTP program
to log on to another computer to copy files when you don't have an account
on the other computer. When you log on, enter 'anonymous' as the username
and your 'e-mail address' as the password. This gives you access to
publicly available files.
- Applets
- Java's advantage is in that
it is composed of many smaller, re-usable chunks of programming code,
called "applets" (short for "applications"). This allows for quicker
transfer over the internet, meaning many new programs will now be able
to become directly interactive, incorporating animation, sound, and
more. (See also Java, ShockWave, and VRML)
- Archie
- A system that helps you find
files located anywhere on the Internet. After Archie locates the file,
you can use FTP to get it. Archie is both a program and a system
of server computers that contain indexes of files.
- Asynchronous Communication
- Communication that occurs at
different times, between two or more individuals, in contrast to Synchronous
communication. For e.g. e-mails, some conferencing systems, bulletin
boards.
- ATM
- ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode)
is a networking technology that provides a guaranteed quality of service.
Standard Internet connections are based on Frame Relay technology. The
throughput of Frame Relay links can be drastically reduced under certain
circumstances, just as a garden hose becomes less effective when stepped
on or kinked. However, ATM links are like metal pipes-they always provide
the same amount of throughput, regardless of the pressure exerted on
them. TCPIPHost's hosting facility has direct ATM connections to the
major Internet hubs on both the East and West coasts (Atlanta, Wisconsin,
New York, Canada, California).
- Authentication
- Verifying the identity of a
person or computer process.
- Auto-responder
- Auto-responders allow you to
automatically return a pre-set message whenever a selected mailboxe
receives a message. It will also notify a selected mailbox of the receipt
and response.
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B
- Backbone
- A high-speed line or series
of connections that form a major pathway within a network. The term
is relative, since a backbone in a small network will likely be much
smaller than many non-backbone lines in a large network.
- Backgrounds
- These are images which are designed
to to sit in the background of a web page so that all other information,
(e.g.text, images) is seen to sit on top.
- Bandwidth
- Information theory used to express
the amount of information that can flow through a given point at a given
time. Usually measured in bits per second (bps). Also referred to as
data transfer.
- Browse / browser
- You get access to the WWW through
an application called a 'browser', like Netscape or Mosaic. To 'browse'
is to search the WWW for information.
- Bulletin Board System (BBS)
- A computer system that provides
its users files for downloading and areas for electronic discussions.
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C
- Certificates: Secure or Digital
- Issued by a Certificate Authority
(such as Equifax, Thawte or Verisign) , a Secure Certificate (also known
as a Digital Certificate) is proof that a Web site is linked to a legitimate
business, with a physical address and phone number. It is the job of
the Certificate Authority to verify the identity of merchants and issue
each a digital or authentication certificate.
- Chatting
- Talking in real time to other
network users from any and all parts of the world.
- CGI script
- Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
is a standard for interfacing external applications with information
servers, such as HTTP or Web servers. A CGI script allows a program
to be run on your server which can output dynamic information. Some
examples of cgi scripts are: hit counters, mail forms, search pages
and guestbooks. While TCPIPHost doesn't offer technical support for any
type of scripting. Although Perl is the predominant language because
of it's worldwide acceptance, CGI can be written in any number of programming
languages such as, Unix SH, KSH, CSH, and C.
- Client
- A software program that is used
to contact and obtain data from a server software program on another
computer, often across a great distance. Each client program is designed
to work with one or more types of server programs.
- Com
- When these letters appear in
lowercase type at the end of an address, they indicate that the host
computer is run by a company rather than a university or government
agency. It also means that the host computer is most likely located
in the United States.
- Cookies
- A mechanism for server-side
connections to store and retrieve information on the client side.
- Cross Platform
- Different computing systems
being able to share data.
- Cyberspace
- A virtual universe of computers,
programs, and data.
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- Data Transfer:
- Data transfer (bandwidth) is
the amount of information downloaded from a Web site. For example, let's
assume all of the data (pictures, text, buttons) on your homepage totals
25KB (the size of Yahoo's homepage). If a thousand people viewed your
homepage you'd have 25MB total data transfer for that month (25KB multiplied
by 1000).
- Disk Space:
- Disk space is the storage capacity
of your Web site for pictures, HTML, graphics, etc. and is usually expressed
in MB.
- Download
- To retrieve a file from another
machine, usually a host machine, to your machine.
- DNS
- The Domain Name System. A system
for translating computer names into numeric Internet addresses.
- Domain Name
- The unique name that identifies
an Internet site. A given machine may have more than one domain name,
but a given domain name points to only one machine. It is also possible
for a domain name to exist but not be connected to an actual machine.
This is often done so that a group or business can have an Internet
e-mail address without having to establish a real Internet site.
In these cases, an Internet service provider's machine must handle the
mail on behalf of the listed domain name.
- Domain Name Registration
- Domain Name Registration is
the process of registering your Web site address (i.e. www.tcpiphost.com)
with an official Internet registrar.
- Domain Transfer
- When a domain name (Web site)
is moved from one Internet address to another, the new address must
be recorded by the domain registrar to allow Internet Domain Name Servers
to point to the new location.
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- Edu
- When these letters appear at
the end of an address (info@mit.edu), they indicate that the
host computer is run by an educational institution. It also means that
the host computer is most likely located in the United States.
- E-mail (Electronic Mail)
- Messages that travel through
the electronic networks rather than being committed to paper.
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F
- Forms
- Forms add extra interactivity
to Web sites. Questionaires can be created, that include text areas,
check boxes and radio buttons which are then sent by the viewer to a
specified mailbox, usually the manager of the Web site.
- F.T.P.
- File Transfer Protocol. A method
of transferring one or more files from one computer to another over
a network or phone line.
- Finger
- A program that displays information
about someone on the net. On most UNIX systems, this command tells you
who is logged on right now. On most Internet hosts, it tells you the
name, possibly some other information based on the person's Internet
address, and the last time they logged on.
- Firewall
- A filter for messages. A system
that has a firewall lets only certain kinds of messages in and out from
the rest of the Internet. If an organization wants to exchange mail
with the Internet, but does not want other Internet members "Telnetting
in" and reading those files, its connection to the Internet can
be protected by using a firewall.
- Forward (e-mail)
- E-mail forwards redirect e-mail
messages to another mailbox either within its domain or to an outside
destination.
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- Gateway
- A computer that connects one
network with another when the two networks use different protocols.
The UUNET computer connects the UUCP network with the Internet, providing
a way for mail messages to move between the two networks.
- GIF
- Graphics Interchange Format.
A platform-independent file format developed by CompuServe, the GIF
format is commonly used to distribute graphics on the Internet.
- Gopher
- A system that lets you find
information by using menus. To use Gopher, you usually Telnet to a Gopher
server and begin browsing the menus.
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H
- Helper Application
- This is an application that
adds extra functionality to Web documents. e.g. If you download a movie
clip the Web browser is unable to play the file but it can boot up a
helper application, in this case it may be 'RealPlayer' (An audio/video
player application).
- Hits
- This refers to the number of
people who have visited a given Web Site or page.
(e.g.10300 hits)
- Host
- A computer on the Internet you
may be able to log on to. You can use FTP to get files from a host computer,
and use other programs (such as telnet) to make use of the host computer.
- Hypermedia
- Computer applications that have
the ability to link information to information created by another application,
characteristic of Internet Applications.
- HTTP
- Hypertext Transfer Protocol.
The method by which World Wide Web pages are transferred over the network.
- HTML
- Hypertext Markup Language. A
system used for writing pages for the World Wide Web. HTML allows text
to include codes that define fonts, layout, embedded graphics, and hypertext
links.
- Hypertext
- A system of writing and displaying
text that enables the text to be linked in multiple ways, available
at several levels of detail. Hypertext documents can also contain links
to related documents, such as those referred to in footnotes. Hypermedia
can also contain pictures, sounds, and /or video.
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I
- Image Map
- An image map is another way
of creating links between web pages. In image maps, different parts
of the image activate different links. (an example: this is an external web link)
- Internet Access
- Internet access is usually made
through a University Network or a commercial service provider.
- Internet
- The vast collection of interconnected
networks that all use the TCP/IP protocols and that evolved from the
ARPANET of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The Internet connects roughly
60,000 independent networks into a vast, global Internet.
- IP
- Internet Protocol. The transport
layer protocol used as a basis of the Internet. IP enables information
to be routed from one network to another in packets and then reassembled
when they reach their destination.
- IP Address
- A four-part number separated
by periods (for example, 165.113.245.2) that uniquely identifies a machine
on the Internet. Every machine on the Internet has a unique IP number;
if a machine does not have an IP number, it is not really on the Internet.
Most machines also have one or more domain names that are easier for
people to remember.
- IRC
- Internet Relay Chat. A system
that enables Internet users to talk with each other in real time over
the Internet rather than in person.
- ISDN
- Integrated Services Digital
Network. A way to move more data over existing regular phone lines.
ISDN is only slowly becoming available in the USA. ISDN can provide
speeds of 64,000 bits per second over a regular phone line at almost
the same cost as a normal phone call.
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J
- Java
- This programming code works
in conjunction with HTML to allow dynamic programs to run and interact with your
computer, where straight HTML is primarily linear information downloaded
to your computer for static display. Java is a product created by Sun
Microsystems. Watch for many new web sites to start
incorporating limitless graphics, sound, motion, programs, etc.. (See
also applets, ShockWave, and VRML)
- JPEG
- Joint Photographic Experts Group.
A group that has defined a compression scheme that reduces the size
of image files by up to 20 times at the cost of slightly reduced image
quality.
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K
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- LAN
- Local Area Network. A group
of connected computers, usually located in close proximity (such as
the same building or floor of the building) so data can be passed among
them.
- Links
- By inserting hypertextual links
into web documents it is possible to connect two documents together.
These documents can be on different computers on opposite sides of the
globe.
- Listserv
- A family of programs that manages
mailing lists by distributing messages posted to the list, adding and
deleting members automatically.
- Locally
- This term refers to information
stored and viewed on your machine(local). As opposed to the information
stored and viewed on other machines on the internet.
- Login
- A noun or a verb. Noun: The
account name used to gain access to a computer system. Unlike a password,
the login name is not a secret. Verb: The act of entering into a computer
system; for example, "Login to the WELL and then go to the GBN
conference."
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M
- Mailbox - E-mail
- Also called POP accounts, E-mailboxes
serve as a convenient way to manage messages sent to your domain.
- Main Mailbox
- Also known as Default Mailbox,
receives all of the e-mail sent to a domain that is not otherwise forwarded
(via a forward or auto-responder).
- Mail To
- This enables e-mail contact
to be written into a Web document. (e.g. select
this e-mail address test@tcpiphost.com
- Message
- A piece of e-mail or a posting
to a newsgroup.
- Mirror
- An FTP server that provides
copies of the same files as another server. Some FTP servers are so
popular that other servers have been set up to mirror them and spread
the FTP load to more than one site.
- Modem
- MOdulator, DEModulator. A device
that you connect to your computer and to a phone line to allow the computer
to talk to other computers through the phone system. Modems convert
the computer's digital signals into analog waves that can be transmitted
over standard voice telephone lines. Modem speeds are measured in bits
per second (bps)--also sometimes expressed as Kilobits (thousands of
bits) per second.
- MySQL
- MySQL is a relational database
management system. A relational database stores data in separate tables
rather than putting all the data in one big storeroom. This adds speed
and flexibility. The tables are linked by defined relations making it
possible to combine data from several tables on request. The SQL part
of MySQL stands for "Structured Query Language" - the most common standardized
language used to access databases.
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- Net
- Net is an abbreviation for the
term Internet which stands for Interconnected networks. When these letters
appear at the end of an address (info@tcpiphost.com), they may indicate
that the host computer is run by a network but is more often used interchangeably
with .com. It also means that the host computer is most likely located
in the United States.
- Netscape
- Netscape is a WWW browser. An
application that allows you to search for information on the World Wide
Web and now other services such as Newsgroups and e-mail.
- Network
- Any time you connect two or
more computers together so they can share resources, you have a computer
network. Connect two or more networks together and you have an internet
(small "i").
- NNTP
- Network News Transfer Protocol.
A protocol defined for distribution, inquiry, retrieval, and posting
of news articles.
- Newsgroup
- A distributed bulletin board
system about a particular topic. Usenet News (also know as Netnews)
is a system that distributes thousands of newsgroups to all parts of
the Internet.
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O
- ODBC Support:
- Object Database Connectivity
(ODBC) support allows ODBC compliant applications to connect to an ODBC
database and extract data without requiring that the user have programming
skills. For example, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Access, and mySQL are
ODBC compliant applications. Using ODBC and mySQL a user can import
data directly into an Excel spreadsheet once mySQL ODBC drivers have
been installed on the user's computer.
- Off-Line
- This is working on a computer
that is currently not connected to the Internet.
- On-Line
- This is working on a computer
that is currently connected to the Internet.
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P
- Packet
- A chunk of information sent
over a network. Each packet contains the destination address, the sender's
address, error-control information, and data.
- Page
- A document, or collection of
information, available by way of the World Wide Web. To make information
available over the WWW, it is organized into pages. A page may contain
text, graphics, video, and/or sound files.
- Ping
- A network management tool that
checks to see whether you can communicate with another computer on the
Internet. It sends a short message to which the other computer automatically
responds. If the other computer does not respond to the ping, you usually
cannot establish communications.
- POP
- Point of Presence. A physical
site in a geographic area where a network access provider, such as UUNET,
has equipment to which users connect. The local phone company's central
office in a particular area is also sometimes referred to as their POP
for that area. (As an example, AT&T's POP for the Seattle area is
in downtown Seattle.)
- POP
- Post Office Protocol. A system
by which a mail server on the Internet lets you grab your mail and download
it to your PC or Macintosh. Most people refer to this protocol with
its version number (POP2, POP3, and so on) to avoid confusing it with
Point of Presence.
- Pop Account
- Same as an e-mail mailbox. A
Pop Account is a mailbox that is set up to accept e-mail sent to a particular
address.
- Posting Up
- To send a message to a discussion
group or mailing list.
- PPP
- Point-to-Point Protocol. A scheme
for connecting two computers over a phone line (or a network link that
acts like a phone line). Similar to SLIP.
- Propagation
- The process of disseminiating
information throughout a system.
- Example 1 - After registration,
new Internet domain name information is propagated across the Internet
when local DNS servers update their databases from a central file.
Note: Not all local DNS databases are updated with the same frequency
(hourly, daily, every other day, etc.).
- Example 2 - Password changes
often must be made on serveral different servers and will not complete
propagation until all affected servers update their databases. Updating
(rehashing) a given server's database is usually an automated process
that is performed at specific intervals.
- Protocol
- A language Computers use when
talking to each other.
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Q
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- Remote Access
- When you access a computer that
you are unable to see. This is done via a modem or computer network.
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S
- Screen Resolution
- The number of dots per square
inch (dpi) displayed on a screen. The higher the number of dots, the
better the resolution.
- Search Engine
- A software application found
on-line which allows you to search for information, by key words, available
on the Internet (e.g. web sites, newsgroups)
- Server
- A computer that provides a service
to other computers on a network. An Archie server, for example, lets
people on the Internet use Archie.
- Service Provider
- A service provider is a company
who supplies Internet services to personal users or business. Among
other things they provide access to the Internet or somewhere to place
Web Pages making them available to the WWW. You pay the service provider
a set fee.
- ShockWave
- Similar to Java, bringing enhanced
multimedia to the Internet. ShockWave is a development tool created
by the company Macromedia.
- Shopping Cart Software
- Software that permits users
to set up an on-line store to sell merchandise via the Internet.
- Site
- A site is the term given to
a place where information can be found on the World Wide Web. (i.e.
A Web site)
- SLIP
- Serial Line Interface Protocol.
A software scheme for connecting a computer to the Internet.
- Socket
- When your computer is on the
Internet via a SLIP connection, a socket is a conversation your computer
is having with a computer elsewhere on the net. You may have one socket
for an FTP session, another socket for a Telnet session, and another
socket taking care of getting your mail.
- SMTP
- Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
A protocol used to transfer e-mail between computers.
- SQL
- Structured Query Language -
a standardized language used to access databases. See MySQL.
-
Synchronous Communication
- Communication that occurs at
the same time, between two or more individuals, for e.g. telephone conversations,
Internet Relay Chat, face-to-face communication
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- TCP/IP
- Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
A protocol used to transfer e-mail between Transfer Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol. The system that networks use to communicate with each other
on the Internet.
- Telnet
- The command and program used
to login from one Internet site to another. The Telnet command/program
gets you to the "login" prompt of another host.
- Terminal
- A device that allows you to
send commands to a computer somewhere else. At a minimum, this usually
means a keyboard and a display screen and some simple circuitry. Usually
you will use terminal software in a personal computer--the software
pretends to be ("emulates") a physical terminal and allows
you to type commands to a computer somewhere else.
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U
- UNIX
- A computer operating system
(the basic software running on a computer, underneath things such as
word processors and spreadsheets). UNIX is designed to be used by many
people at the same time (it is "multiuser") and has TCP/IP
built in. It is the most common operating system for servers on the
Internet.
- URL
- Uniform Resource Locator. The
standard way to give the address of any resource on the Internet that
is part of the World Wide Web (WWW). A URL looks like this: http://www.matisse.net/seminars.htm.
The most common way to use a URL is to enter into a Web browser program,
such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator.
- USENET
- An informal group of systems
that exchange "news." USENET predates the Internet, but today,
the Internet is used to transfer much of USENET's traffic.
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V
- Viewer
- A program used by Gopher, WAIS,
or WWW client programs to show files with contents other than text.
You would use a viewer to display graphics or video files, or to play
sound files.
- VRML
- Virtual Reality Markup Language.
A standard by which the internet uses for delivering 3-dimensional virtual
reality over the the Web.
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W
- WAN
- Wide Area Network. Any internet
or network that covers an area larger than a single building or campus.
(See also: Internet, LAN, network)
- World Wide Web
- The newest and most ambitious
of the special Internet services. The World Wide Web provides full text
and graphical access to documents created using Hypertext Markup Language(HTML).
It is the first Internet service that incorporates many of the most
popular platforms (e-mail, Gopher, FTP, Wais, Newsgroups). Attributed
to the world wide success of the Internet. Often abbreviated 'WWW'.
- Web
- An abbreviated term for the
World Wide Web.
- Web Document
- Is a collection of information
stored on the World Wide Web (WWW) which has the benefit of using hypertext
links to link to other documents on the (WWW).
- Web Site
- A collection of html files,
graphic files and any other file types that are supported by the World
Wide Web that can be viewed by using a World Wide Web browser.
- Windows Socket
- (WinSock). Windows Sockets is
a standard way for Windows-based programs to work with TCP/IP. You can
use WinSock if you use SLIP to connect to the Internet.
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