topic 11 The Internet & WWW the Internet • worldwide connection of thousands of computer networks. • these networks use a common language to communicate. • transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) – enables instantaneous transmission/reception of digital data • the Internet is a cooperative community of networks. • no particular body owns the internet. the network • • the Internet is structured in an ‘hierarchical form’. more than 500,000 networks in more than 150 countries. bandwidth • • • • communication channels carry data on the Internet backbone bandwidth- is a channel’s data carrying capacity. bandwidth = no. of bits of information passed/second different Internet channels – – – – – phone Lines (twisted pair) coaxial cable fibre Optics microwave satellite http://www.southerncrosscables.com/media/user/images/submarinegraphic.jpg fibre-optic cable the Internet in Australia • • • Australian telecommunication agencies carry internet traffic on the Telstra backbone Internet provided and maintained by Telstra Internet Direct Telstra’s domestic internet capacity – 1997 100Mbps – 1999 1,000Mbps – 2004 10,000Mbps broadband connectivity - fibre optic - satellite - microwave tcp/ip • • • TCP/IP – data transmission protocol on which Internet is based. – breaks Internet data into small ‘Information Packets’. – each packet contains the data and the address where it is being sent. Routers – computers routing ‘Information Packets’ through channels to destinations. TCP/IP – keeps records of original data for rearranging packets in correct order on arrival at destination. internet traffic Internet addresses • IP address • each computer on the Internet has a unique IP number. • • it consists of ‘4 bytes’, numbers ‘0 and 255’, separated by periods eg- 139.230.169.149 email • • • e-mail is electronic transmission and reception of messages between users on the Internet. each user has a unique ‘e-mail’ address. – eg- john@hotmail.com – where ‘john’ is username, ‘hotmail.com’ is the domain. an e-mail consists of – ‘Title:’ or ‘To:’ – ‘Body’ – ‘Signature’ peer 2 peer • two (or more) computers linked directly to each other via their IP numbers • allows real-time communication between machines • some systems use servers to identify machines on the network • examples: – – – – ICQ CU-SeeMe MSN Messager Skype (voice over IP) voice over IP • • • • • voice messages sent as packets over the Internet computer to computer computer to phone operates on local area networks many extra services videoconferencing • enables people to see and speak • previously required dedicated lines • bandwidth hungry remote control • Internet used to control devices remotely World Wide Web • most commonly used method of accessing information the internet – – – – sound graphics animation interactivity a browser tracking assignment submission • • • • • 5 MB limit all files in one folder create archive of the folder Send by email, lars@larsagundersen.no Verify that I send a reply confirming that I have received submission • keep a copy in case!! exam • • • • covering lecture content 2 hours + 5 mins reading 20 multi-guess (10 marks) 20 short answer (20 marks) – brief responses and point form is encouraged