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Electronic Commerce, Twelfth Edition
2-1
Chapter 2
Technology Infrastructure: The Internet and the World
Wide Web
At a Glance
Instructorโs Manual Table of Contents
๏ท
Introduction
๏ท
Learning Objectives
๏ท
Teaching Tips
๏ท
Quick Quizzes
๏ท
Class Discussion Topics
๏ท
Additional Projects
๏ท
Additional Resources
๏ท
Key Terms
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Lecture Notes
Introduction
A growing number of Internet users, especially in developing countries, use a smartphone
or a tablet device instead of a computer to go online. Many companies have developed Web
sites that work well on the smaller screens and keyboards of these devices. However, as
the number of Internet users connected through mobile telephone networks increases, the
volume is taxing existing technologies and threatening to overload networks.
Wireless telephone networks use antennas on towers to collect mobile device signals and
transfer them into a wired network through equipment at the base of the towers. As more
users operate devices within the range of a particular tower, the speed of service each user
experiences slows down, sometimes significantly. Currently the only solution is for
telecommunications companies to add more cell towers, which is expensive and requires
locations that can be hard to acquire.
With mobile data traffic expected to double in 2017 and triple in 2018, the search for
solutions is underway. Steve Perlman, the developer of WebTV is working on pCell, which
has been shown in lab tests to operate at 35 times the speed of current wireless network
technologies. It is currently being tested with Dish Network in San Francisco.
Instead of cell towers, pCell creates a network of โpersonal cellsโ based on each device
using a series of small radio transmitters. It is designed to work with existing mobile
devices and gives each device access to the full speed of the network.
This chapter addresses technologies that created the Internet and enabled the World Wide
Web to emerge as a powerful global business platform. The continuing development of
these technologies will make new digital products and services available in the future.
Learning Objectives
In this chapter, students will learn:
๏ท About the origin, growth, and current structure of the Internet
๏ท How packet-switched networks are combined to form the Internet
๏ท How Internet, e-mail, and Web protocols work
๏ท About Internet addressing and how Web domain names are constructed
๏ท About the history and use of markup languages on the Web
๏ท How HTML tags and links work
๏ท About the cost and performance of Internet connection technologies
๏ท About Internet2 and the Semantic Web
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Teaching Tips
The Internet and the World Wide Web
1. Introduce the terms computer network, an internet, and the Internet.
2. Note that networks of computers and the Internet that connects them to each other form
the basic technological structure that underlies virtually all electronic commerce.
3. Introduce the term World Wide Web (Web).
Origins of the Internet
1. Explain the 1960 origins of the Internet by discussing the need for powerful computers
for coordination and control of weapons defense systems. Note that the initial research
goal was to design a worldwide network that could remain operational, even if parts of
the network were destroyed by enemy military action or sabotage.
2. Emphasize that the computer networks that existed at that time used leased telephone
company lines for their connections. Note that the Defense Department was concerned
about the inherent risk of a single-channel method for connecting computers, and its
researchers developed a different method of sending information through multiple
channels using packets.
3. Describe the 1969 ARPANET network developed by Defense Department researchers
in the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). Emphasize that the ARPANET
was the earliest of the networks that eventually combined to become what we now call
the Internet.
4. Note that throughout the 1970s and 1980s, many researchers in the academic
community connected to the ARPANET and contributed to the technological
developments that increased its speed and efficiency. At the same time, researchers at
other universities were creating their own networks using similar technologies.
New Uses for the Internet
1. Students will be very interested to learn that e-mail was born in 1972 when Ray
Tomlinson, a researcher who used the network, wrote a program that could send and
receive messages over the network.
2. Introduce the terms mailing list, Usenet (Userโs News Network), and newsgroups.
3. Mention that the use of the networks was limited to those members of the research and
academic communities who could access them.
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4. Between 1979 and 1989, network applications were improved and tested by an
increasing number of users. As the number of people in different organizations using
these networks increased, security concerns arose; these concerns continue to be
problematic.
Commercial Use of the Internet
1. An important fact to point out is that, in 1989, the National Science Foundation (NSF)
permitted two commercial e-mail services, MCI Mail and CompuServe, to establish
limited connections to the Internet for the sole purpose of exchanging e-mail
transmissions with users of the Internet.
2. Note that as the 1990s began, people from all walks of life (not just scientists or
academic researchers) started thinking of these networks as the global resource that we
now know as the Internet.
Growth of the Internet
1. Emphasize that the privatization of the Internet was substantially completed in 1995,
when the NSF turned over the operation of the main Internet connections to a group of
privately owned companies.
2. Introduce the terms network access points (NAPs), network access providers, and
Internet service providers (ISPs).
3. Define the term Internet hosts and refer to Figure 2-1 to illustrate the dramatic growth
in the number of Internet hosts.
The Internet of Things
1. Point out that in recent years, devices other than computers have been connected to the
Internet, such as mobile phones and tablet devices. The connection of these devices to
the Internet serves to connect the users of those devices to each other. However, the
connection of devices to the Internet that are not used by persons is increasing rapidly.
2. Explain how computers can also be connected to each other using the Internet to
conduct business transactions without human intervention.
3. Define the term Internet of Things.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about the Internet of Things, see: http://www.internet-ofthings.eu/
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Electronic Commerce, Twelfth Edition
2-5
Quick Quiz 1
1. The ____ is a particular internet, which uses a specific set of rules and connects
networks all over the world to each other.
Answer: Internet
2. A(n) ____ is an e-mail address that forwards any message it receives to any user who
has subscribed to the list.
Answer: mailing list
3. ____ sell Internet access rights directly to larger customers and indirectly to smaller
firms and individuals through other companies, called Internet service providers (ISPs).
Answer: Network access providers
4. ____ are computers directly connected to the Internet.
Answer: Internet hosts
5. The subset of the Internet that includes computers and sensors connected to each other
for communication and automatic transaction processing is often called the ____.
Answer: Internet of Things
Packet-Switched Networks
1. Introduce the terms local area network (LAN) and wide area networks (WANs).
2. Note that the early models for WANs were the circuits of the local and long-distance
telephone companies of the time, because the first early WANs used leased telephone
company lines for their connections.
3. Introduce the terms circuit, circuit switching, packet-switched, and packets.
Routing Packets
1. Introduce the terms routing computers, router computers, routers, gateway
computers, border routers (edge routers), routing algorithms, routing tables, and
configuration tables.
2. Point out that individual LANs and WANs can use a variety of different rules and
standards for creating packets within their networks. The network devices that move
packets from one part of a network to another are called hubs, switches, and bridges.
Emphasize that routers are used to connect networks to other networks.
3. An important concept for students to understand is that when packets leave a network to
travel on the Internet, they must be translated into a standard format. Routers usually
perform this translation function.
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4. Refer to the diagram in Figure 2-2 to illustrate a small portion of the Internet that shows
an organizations router-based architecture. The figure shows only the routers that
connect each organizationโs WANs and LANs to the Internet, not the other routers that
are inside the WANs and LANs or that connect them to each other within the
organization.
5. Introduce the terms Internet backbone and backbone routers.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about routing tables, see:
http://compnetworking.about.com/od/hardwarenetworkgear/f/routing_table.htm
Public and Private Networks
1. Introduce the terms public network, private network, and leased line.
2. Note that the advantage of a leased line is security.
3. Explain why the largest drawback to a private network is the cost of the leased lines,
which can be quite expensive.
Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)
1. Introduce the term virtual private network (VPN).
2. Introduce the terms IP tunneling, encapsulation, and IP wrapper.
3. Explain that the word virtual is used as part of VPN because, although the connection
appears to be a permanent connection, it is actually temporary. The VPN is created,
carries out its work over the Internet, and is then terminated.
Intranets and Extranets
1. Remind students that in the early days of the Internet, the distinction between private
and public networks was clear. However, as networking (and inter-networking)
technologies became less expensive and easier to deploy, organizations began building
more and more internets (small โiโ), or interconnected networks.
2. Distinguish between the terms intranet and extranet. Point out that โintranetโ is used
when the internet does not extend beyond the boundaries of a particular organization;
โextranetโ is used when the internet extends beyond the boundaries of an organization
and includes networks of other organizations.
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Quick Quiz 2
1. A network of computers that are located close together is called a(n) ____.
Answer: local area network (LAN)
2. The combination of telephone lines and the closed switches that connect them to each
other is called a(n) ____.
Answer: circuit
3. (True or False) Although circuit switching works well for telephone calls, it does not
work as well for sending data across a large WAN or an interconnected network like the
Internet.
Answer: True
4. The computers that decide how best to forward each packet are called ____.
Answer: routing computers, router computers, routers, gateway computers, border
routers, edge routers
Internet Protocols
1. Define protocol. Introduce the terms Network Control Protocol (NCP), proprietary
architecture, closed architecture, and open architecture.
2. Review the four key rules for message handling.
3. Explain how the open architecture approach has contributed to the success of the
Internet because computers manufactured by different companies (Apple, Dell,
Hewlett-Packard, etc.) can be interconnected.
TCP/IP
1. Introduce the terms Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol
(IP).
2. Explain that the TCP controls the disassembly of a message or a file into packets before
it is transmitted over the Internet, and it controls the reassembly of those packets into
their original formats when they reach their destinations. The IP specifies the addressing
details for each packet, labeling each with the packetโs origination and destination
addresses.
3. Emphasize that in addition to its Internet function, TCP/IP is used today in many LANs.
The TCP/IP protocol is provided in most personal computer operating systems
commonly used today, including Linux, Macintosh, Microsoft Windows, and UNIX.
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IP Addressing
1. Introduce the terms Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) and IP address.
2. Explain that computers do all of their internal calculations using a base 2 (or binary)
number system in which each digit is either a 0 or a 1, corresponding to a condition of
either off or on.
3. Introduce the term dotted decimal.
4. Note that today, IP addresses are assigned by three not-for-profit organizations: the
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN), the Resรฉaux IP Europรฉens (RIPE),
and the Asia-Pacific Network Information Center (APNIC).
5. Inform your students on how to use the ARIN Whois page at the ARIN Web site to
search the IP addresses owned by organizations in North America.
6. Point out that, in the early days of the Internet, the four billion addresses provided by
the Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) rules certainly seemed to be more addresses than
an experimental research network would ever need.
7. Introduce the terms subnetting, private IP addresses, and Network Address
Translation (NAT).
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about TCP/IP and subnetting, see:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/164015.
8. Point out that the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) worked on several new
protocols that could solve the limited addressing capacity of IPv4 and, in 1997, it
approved Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) as the protocol that will replace IPv4.
9. Note that the last available IPv4 addresses were allocated in summer 2015. Companies
that still need IPv4 addresses can buy them on secondary markets or use subnetting and
their NAT devices to adapt their traffic to IPv6.
10. Explain the major advantage of IPv6. It uses a 128-bit number for addresses instead of
the 32-bit number used in IPv4.
11. Discuss the IPv6 shorthand notation system for expressing addresses. Introduce the
terms colon hexadecimal or colon hex. Explain the hexadecimal (base 16) numbering
system that uses 16 characters (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, a, b, c, d, e, and f).
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2-9
Electronic Mail Protocols
1. Introduce the term electronic mail (e-mail).
2. Explain that most organizations use a client/server structure to handle e-mail.
3. Introduce the terms e-mail server and e-mail client software.
4. Emphasize that if e-mail messages did not follow standard rules, an e-mail message
created by a person using one e-mail client program could not be read by a person using
a different e-mail client program.
5. Introduce the terms Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), Post Office Protocol
(POP), Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME), and Interactive Mail
Access Protocol (IMAP).
Web Page Request and Delivery Protocols
1. Introduce the terms Web client computers, Web client software, Web browser
software, Web server software, client/server architecture, Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP), and Uniform Resource Locator (URL).
Quick Quiz 3
1. A(n) ____ is a collection of rules for formatting, ordering, and error checking data sent
across a network.
Answer: protocol
2. (True or False) The IP controls the disassembly of a message or a file into packets
before it is transmitted over the Internet, and it controls the reassembly of those packets
into their original formats when they reach their destinations.
Answer: False
3. The term ____ refers to the use of reserved private IP addresses within LANs and
WANs to provide additional address space.
Answer: subnetting
4. The purpose of a(n) ____ is to respond to requests for Web pages from Web clients.
Answer: Web server
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Emergence of the World Wide Web
1. Set the stage by mentioning that the ideas behind the Web developed from innovative
ways of thinking about and organizing information storage and retrieval.
2. Point out that two important ideas that became key technological elements of the Web
are hypertext and graphical user interfaces.
The Development of Hypertext
1. Briefly describe:
a. Vannevar Bushโs Memex hypothetical machine that would include mechanical
aids, such as microfilm readers and indexes, that would help users quickly and
flexibly consult their collected knowledge.
b. Ted Nelsonโs description of a system in which text on one page links to text on
other pages.
c. Doug Englebartโs first experimental hypertext system on one of the large
computers of the 1960s.
d. Tim Berners-Leeโs project to improve the laboratory research documenthandling procedures for his employer.
2. Introduce the terms hypertext, hypertext server, Hypertext Markup Language
(HTML), Web servers, and hypertext link/hyperlink.
Graphical Interfaces for Hypertext
1. Introduce the term Web browser.
2. Describe the difference between an HTML document and a word-processing document.
3. Define the basic functions of a graphical user interface (GUI): presenting program
control functions and program output to users and accepting their input.
The World Wide Web
1. Note that initially, few people outside the scientific research community had software
that could read HTML documents on the World Wide Web.
2. Describe the historical significance of Mosaic, the first GUI program that could read
HTML and use HTML hyperlinks to navigate from page to page on computers
anywhere on the Internet.
3. Use Figure 2-3 to illustrate the overall rapid growth rate of the Web.
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Electronic Commerce, Twelfth Edition
2-11
4. Invite students to offer ideas explaining the increase in the number of Web sites that
occurred from 2010 to 2011, with the number of sites doubling.
The Deep Web
1. Using the example of visiting Amazon.com and searching for a book about โonline
business,โ computers, briefly describe the concept of the deep Web. Explain that the
query of the databasesโ information about books is used to create a Web page that is a
customized response to the userโs search.
2. Note that the deep Web can be difficult or impossible to search because its information
is not stored on the Web, but in databases that are searched only when a user requests
that information through the Web site that maintains the database.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about the deep Web, see:
http://money.cnn.com/2014/03/10/technology/deep-web/ and
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/internet/basics/how-the-deep-webworks.htm
Domain Names
1. Introduce the concept of domain names and the term top-level domain (TLD).
2. Note that, since 1998, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN) has had the responsibility of managing domain names and coordinating them
with the IP address registrars.
3. Introduce the terms generic top-level domain (gTLD) and sponsored top-level
domain (sTLD).
4. Use Figure 2-4 to illustrate a list of some commonly used TLDs, including gTLDs and
some of the more frequently used country TLDs.
Quick Quiz 4
1. A(n) ____ is a software interface that lets users read (or browse) HTML documents and
move from one HTML document to another through text formatted with hypertext link
tags in each file.
Answer: Web browser
2. A(n) ____ is a way of presenting program control functions and program output to users
and accepting their input.
Answer: graphical user interface (GUI)
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3. The store of information that is available through the Web is called the ____.
Answer: deep Web
4. ____ are sets of words that are assigned to specific IP addresses.
Answer: Domain names
Markup Languages and the Web
1. Discuss the most important parts of a Web page – the structure of the page and the text
that makes up the main part of the page.
2. Introduce the terms text markup language, markup tags (tags), Standard
Generalized Markup Language (SGML), Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C), and
Extensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML).
3. Refer to Figure 2-5 to illustrate how HTML, XML, and XHTML have descended from
the original SGML specification.
Hypertext Markup Language
1. Introduce the concept of hypertext elements.
2. Explain to students that HTML is easier to use than SGML and is the prevalent markup
language used to create documents on the Web today. The W3C maintains detailed
information about HTML versions and related topics on its W3C HTML Working
Group page.
3. The latest version of HTML is 5.0 which was finalized in 2014. You can learn more
about it by visiting the W3C HTML 5 page.
4. Introduce the terms metalanguage and Extensible Markup Language (XML).
HTML Tags
1. Most HTML tags have an opening tag and a closing tag that format the text between
them.
2. Figure 2-6 shows some sample text marked up with HTML tags. Figure 2-7 shows this
text as it appears in a Web browser.
HTML Links
1. Note that users can read Web pages in serial order or in whatever order they prefer by
following hyperlinks.
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2. Figure 2-8 illustrates the differences between reading a paper catalog in a linear way
and reading a hypertext catalog in a nonlinear way.
3. Introduce the terms linear hyperlink structure, hierarchical hyperlink structure,
home page or start page, and site map.
4. Figure 2-9 illustrates three common Web page organization structures: linear,
hierarchical and hybrid.
5. Introduce the term anchor tag.
Cascading Style Sheets
1. Introduce the terms style sheet and cascading style sheet.
2. Note that the term cascading is used because designers can apply many style sheets to
the same Web page, one on top of the other, and the styles from each style sheet flow
(or cascade) into the next.
Extensible Markup Language (XML)
1. As companies began to conduct business online, they turned to XML to help them
maintain Web pages that contained large amounts of data.
2. Point out that XML includes data-management capabilities that HTML cannot provide.
Use Figures 2-10 and 2-11 to illustrate how HTML might be used to display a Web
page that includes a list of countries and some basic facts about each country.
3. Explain that XML differs from HTML in two important respects. First, XML is not a
markup language with defined tags. It is a framework within which individuals,
companies, and other organizations can create their own sets of tags. Second, XML tags
do not specify how text appears on a Web page; the tags convey the meaning (the
semantics) of the information included within them.
๏ท
Refer to Figures 2-12 and 2-13 to illustrate the difference between appearance and
semantics.
4. Emphasize that the greatest strengths of XML is that allows users to define their own
tags, but that this is also its greatest weakness. To overcome that weakness, many
companies have agreed to follow common standards for XML tags. These standards, in
the form of data-type definitions (DTDs) or XML schemas, are available for a
number of industries including LegalXML, MathML, and Extensible Business
Reporting Language (XBRL).
5. Introduce the term XML vocabulary.
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6. Note that although it is possible to display XML files in some Web browsers, XML files
are not intended to be displayed in a Web browser.
7. Introduce the terms Extensible Style sheet Language (XSL) and XML parsers.
8. Use Figure 2-14 to illustrate a diagram showing one way that a Web server might
process HTTP requests for Web pages generated from an XML database in different
formats for different Web browsing devices.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about XML, see: http://www.w3schools.com/xml/default.ASP
Quick Quiz 5
1. A(n) ____ language specifies a set of tags that are inserted into the text.
Answer: text markup
2. A(n) ____ structure resembles conventional paper documents in that the reader begins
on the first page and clicks the Next button to move to the next page in a serial fashion.
Answer: linear hyperlink
3. In HTML, hyperlinks are created using the HTML ____.
Answer: anchor tag
4. (True or False) XML files, like HTML files, can be created in any text editor.
Answer: True
Internet Connection Options
1. Introduce the term Internet access providers (IAPs).
Connectivity Overview
1. Review the most common connection types ISPs offer: voice-grade telephone lines,
various types of broadband connections, leased lines, and wireless.
2. Introduce the term bandwidth. Discuss the major distinguishing factors between
various ISPs and their connection options – that is, the bandwidth they offer.
3. Introduce the term net bandwidth.
4. Note that bandwidth can differ for data traveling to or from the ISP depending on the
userโs connection type. Connection types include symmetric connections and
asymmetric connections.
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5. Introduce the terms upstream bandwidth (upload bandwidth) and downstream
bandwidth (downstream bandwidth or downlink bandwidth).
Voice-Grade Telephone Connections
1. Introduce the terms plain old telephone service (POTS) and broadband services.
Broadband Services
1. Introduce the terms Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) and asymmetric digital
subscriber line (ADSL, usually abbreviated DSL).
2. Explain that DSL connection methods do not use a modem. Note that unlike DSL, cable
modem connection bandwidths vary with the number of other subscribers competing for
the shared resource.
Leased-Line Connections
1. Introduce the terms T1 line, T3 line, frame relay, asynchronous transfer mode
(ATM), and optical fiber.
Wireless Connections
๏ท
Note that the Internet was built on telephone company wires and infrastructure but that
many Internet users today use some form of wireless connection.
Wireless Ethernet (Wi-Fi)
1. Introduce the terms Wi-Fi and wireless Ethernet.
2. Note that the technology is also known by its network specification number (802.11)
and that the latest version, 802.11ac, is replacing 802.11n because it has greater
bandwidth.
3. Introduce the terms wireless access point (WAP), roaming, and hot spots.
Personal area networks
1. Introduce the terms Bluetooth, personal area networks (PANs) or piconets, Ultra
Wideband (UWB) and ZigBee.
2. One major advantage of Bluetooth technology is that it consumes very little power,
which is an important consideration for mobile devices.
3. Many observers believe that UWB technologies will be used in future personal area
networking applications such as home media centers and in linking mobile phones to
the Internet.
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4. An increasing number of applications have been developed to run on ZigBee that
control home energy management systems (including lighting, heating, cooling),
commercial building automation, security systems, and remote controls for consumer
electronic products.
Fixed-Point Wireless
1. Introduce the terms fixed-point wireless, repeaters (transceivers) and mesh routing.
Satellite Microwave
1. Satellite microwave transmissions made Internet connection possible for the first time
to many people in rural areas and are now used by airlines to provide inflight Internet.
2. While satellite networks were the only option for many years, many types of wireless
networks are now available.
Mobile Telephone Networks
1. Introduce the term short message service (SMS).
2. Review data transmission speeds for mobile data including third-generation (3G)
wireless technology, Long Term Evolution (LTE) and Worldwide Interoperability
for Microwave Access (WiMAX), that are generally referred to as fourth-generation
(4G) wireless technology.
3. Note that most tablet devices, mobile phones, and smartphones have the ability to use
either a mobile telephone network or a locally available wireless network.
4. Refer to Figure 2-15 to summarize the speed and cost information for the most
commonly available wired and wireless options for connecting a home or business to the
Internet.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about WiMAX, see:
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/wimax.htm
Quick Quiz 6
1. ____ is the amount of data that can travel through a communication line per unit of
time.
Answer: Bandwidth
2. ____ connections provide the same bandwidth in both directions.
Answer: Symmetric
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3. The telephone lines used to cover the vast distances between rural customers are usually
____ lines, which cost less than telephone lines designed to carry data, are made of
lower-grade copper, and were never intended to carry data.
Answer: voice-grade
4. The most common wireless connection technology for use on LANs is called ____.
Answer: Wi-Fi, wireless Ethernet, or 802.11n
5. Many mobile phones have a small screen and can be used to send and receive short text
messages using a protocol called ____.
Answer: short message service (SMS)
Internet2 and the Semantic Web
1. Students will find it interesting to learn that Internet2 is also used by universities to
conduct large collaborative research projects that require several supercomputers
connected at very fast speeds or that use multiple video feeds, features that would be
impossible on the Internet given its lower bandwidth limits.
2. Introduce the terms Semantic Web, software agents, resource description
framework (RDF), and ontology.
3. Note that thus far, several areas of scientific inquiry have begun developing ontologies
that will become the building blocks of the Semantic Web in their areas.
๏ท
Biology, genomics, and medicine have all made progress toward specific
ontologies.
๏ท
Other sciences, such as climatology, hydrology, and oceanography have similar
incentives (as many researchers around the world work on common problems such
as global warming) and scientists are developing ontologies for their disciplines.
4. Introduce students to the Dbpedia project.
5. Note that current commercial applications of Semantic Web community research
include the natural language interfaces of mobile phone search utilities such as Siri and
Google Now.
Teaching
Tip
To learn more about Internet2, see:
http://www.internet2.edu/about-us/
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Quick Quiz 7
1. ____ is used by universities to conduct large collaborative research projects that require
several supercomputers connected at very fast speeds, or that use multiple video feeds,
features that would be impossible on the Internet given its lower bandwidth limits.
Answer: Internet2
2. A(n) ____ is a set of standards for XML syntax.
Answer: resource description framework (RDF)
3. The ____ project envisions words on Web pages being tagged (using XML) with their
meanings.
Answer: Semantic Web
4. A(n) ____ is a set of standards that defines, in detail, the relationships among RDF
standards and specific XML tags within a particular knowledge domain.
Answer: ontology
Class Discussion Topics
1. Is there a practical application for the W3C Semantic Web?
2. What is the difference between the Internet and the World Wide Web?
3. What do you think is the main motivation for the creation of Internet2?
4. What is a software agent and why is it such an integral part of Internet2?
Additional Projects
1. Provide answers for the following questions:
a. How will Internet2 benefit current Internet users?
b. Is Internet2 a separate network and will it replace the current commercial
Internet?
c. What kind of technology will be needed to use the advanced Internet
applications and technologies?
d. What are some of Internet2’s long-term goals?
2. Describe how a VPN connection using IP tunneling allows company employees in
remote locations to send sensitive information to company computers.
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Additional Resources
1. Routing packets: http://computer.howstuffworks.com/router5.htm
2. Frame relay: http://www.arcelect.com/frame_relay-56kbps_ft1-t1.htm
3. Introduction to RDF: http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/ws_rdf_intro.asp
Key Terms
๏ ADSL: one of the newest technologies that uses the DSL protocol to provide service in
the broadband range. It provides transmission bandwidths from 100 to 640 Kbps
upstream and from 1.5 to 9 Mbps (million bits per second) downstream.
๏ Anchor tag: used to create HTML hyperlinks.
๏ Asymmetric connections: provide different bandwidths for each direction.
๏ Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL): one of the newest technologies that uses
the DSL protocol to provide service in the broadband range. It provides transmission
bandwidths from 100 to 640 Kbps upstream and from 1.5 to 9 Mbps (million bits per
second) downstream.
๏ Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM): technology used by NAPs.
๏ Backbone routers: very large computers that can each handle more than 5 billion
packets per second.
๏ Bandwidth: the amount of data that can travel through a communication line per unit of
time.
๏ Base 2 (binary): number system in which each digit is either a 0 or a 1, corresponding
to a condition of either off or on.
๏ Bluetooth: one of the first wireless protocols, designed for personal use over short
distances.
๏ Border router: the computer that decides how best to forward each packet.
๏ Broadband: connections that operate at speeds of greater than about 200 Kbps.
๏ Cascading style sheet (CSS): a specific type of style sheet that can be applied to each
Web page, one on top of the other, and the styles from each style sheet flow (or
cascade) into the next.
๏ Circuit: the combination of telephone lines and the closed switches that connect them
to each other.
๏ Circuit switching: centrally controlled, single-connection model where a single path of
connected circuits switched into each other is maintained for the entire length of the
call.
๏ Client/server architecture: combination of client computers running Web client
software and server computers running Web server software.
๏ Closed architecture: in the early days of computing, the practice of each computer
manufacturer creating its own protocol, so computers made by different manufacturers
could not be connected to each other.
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๏ Closing tag: HTML tag that formats text.
๏ Computer network: any technology that allows people to connect computers to each
other.
๏ Configuration tables: information stored includes lists of connections that lead to
particular groups of other routers, rules that specify which connections to use first, and
rules for handling instances of heavy packet traffic and network congestion.
๏ Data-type definitions (DTDs): are common standards for XML tags that are available
for many industries including legal, math and science and accounting and finance.
๏ Deep Web: the store of information that is available through the Web.
๏ Digital subscriber line (DSL): connection methods do not use a modem. They use a
piece of networking equipment that is a form of network switch.
๏ Domain name: set of words that are assigned to specific IP addresses.
๏ Dotted decimal: four numbers separated by periods.
๏ Downlink bandwidth: a measure of the amount of information that can travel from the
Internet to a user in a given amount of time.
๏ Download bandwidth: a measure of the amount of information that can travel from the
Internet to a user in a given amount of time.
๏ Downstream bandwidth: a measure of the amount of information that can travel from
the Internet to a user in a given amount of time.
๏ DSL: also known as Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL). It provides
transmission bandwidths from 100 to 640 Kbps upstream and from 1 to 15 Mbps
(million bits per second) downstream.
๏ Edge router: the computers that decide how best to forward each packet.
๏ Electronic mail: mail sent across the Internet.
๏ E-mail: mail sent across the Internet.
๏ E-mail client software: communicates with the e-mail server software on the e-mail
server computer to send and receive e-mail messages.
๏ E-mail server: a computer that is devoted to handling e-mail. Software that runs on the
e-mail server stores and forwards e-mail messages.
๏ Encapsulation: placing the encrypted packets inside another packet.
๏ Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL): XML schema for accounting and
finance that is one of the most widely used in the world.
๏ Extensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML): a reformulation of HTML
version 4.0 as an XML application.
๏ Extensible Markup Language (XML): another markup language that was derived
from SGML for use on the Web. Used to mark up information that companies share
with each other over the Internet.
๏ Extensible Style Sheet Language (XSL): used to write XML formatting instructions.
๏ Extranet: an intranet that has been extended to include specific entities outside the
boundaries of the organization, such as business partners, customers, or suppliers.
๏ Fixed-point wireless: uses a system of repeaters to forward a radio signal from the ISP
to customers.
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๏ Fourth-generation (4G) wireless technology: wireless technology that offers
download speeds up to 14 Mbps and upload speeds up to 8 Mbps.
๏ Frame relay: used by NAPs and the computers that perform routing functions on the
Internet backbone.
๏ Gateway computers: the computer that decides how best to forward each packet.
๏ Generic top-level domain (gTLD): TLDs that are available to specified categories of
users (.biz, .info, .name, and .pro.).
๏ Graphical user interface (GUI): a way of presenting program control functions and
program output to users and accepting their input.
๏ Hexadecimal (base 16): numbering system that uses 16 digits (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
a, b, c, d, e, and f).
๏ Hierarchical hyperlink structure: in this structure, the Web user opens an
introductory page called a home page or start page.
๏ Home page: an introductory page. This page contains one or more links to other pages,
and those pages, in turn, link to other pages.
๏ Hot spots: WAPs that are open to the public.
๏ Hyperlink: points to another location in the same or another HTML document.
๏ Hypertext: page-linking system.
๏ Hypertext element: text elements that are related to each other.
๏ Hypertext link: points to another location in the same or another HTML document.
๏ Hypertext Markup Language (HTML): the language used for the creation of Web
pages.
๏ Hypertext server: a computer that stores files written in Hypertext Markup Language
(HTML).
๏ Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP): the set of rules for delivering Web page files
over the Internet.
๏ Interactive Mail Access Protocol (IMAP): a newer e-mail protocol that performs the
same basic functions as POP, but includes additional features.
๏ internet (small โiโ): a group of computer networks that have been interconnected.
๏ Internet: global system of interconnected computer networks.
๏ Internet access providers (IAPs): companies that provide Internet access to
individuals, businesses, and other organizations.
๏ Internet backbone: routers that handle packet traffic along the Internetโs main
connecting points and the telecommunications lines connecting them.
๏ Internet hosts: computers directly connected to the Internet.
๏ Internet of Things: the subset of the Internet that includes these computers and sensors
connected to each other for communication and automatic transaction processing.
๏ Internet Protocol (IP): specifies the addressing details for each packet, labeling each
with the packetโs origination and destination addresses.
๏ Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4): uses a 32-bit number to identify the computers
connected to the Internet.
๏ Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6): uses a 128-bit number for addresses instead of the
32-bit number used in IPv4.
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๏ Internet service providers (ISPs): offer many different types of connections to the
Internet.
๏ Internet2: an experimental test bed for new networking technologies that is separate
from the original Internet.
๏ Intranet: an internet that does not extend beyond the organization that created it.
๏ IP address: a 32-bit number used to identify the computers connected to the Internet.
๏ IP tunneling: creates a private passageway through the public Internet that provides
secure transmission from one computer to another.
๏ IP wrapper: the outer packet of an encrypted packet.
๏ Leased line: a permanent telephone connection between two points.
๏ LegalXML: XML schema for information in the legal profession.
๏ Linear hyperlink structure: resembles conventional paper documents in that the
reader begins on the first page and clicks the Next button to move to the next page in a
serial fashion.
๏ Local area network (LAN): a network of computers that are located close together.
๏ Long Term Evolution (LTE): a 4G wireless technology that offers download speeds
up to 14 Mbps and upload speeds up to 8 Mbps.
๏ Mailing list: an e-mail address that forwards any message it receives to any user who
has subscribed to the list.
๏ Markup tags: provide formatting instructions that Web client software can understand.
๏ MathML: XML schema for mathematical and scientific information.
๏ Mesh routing: directly transmits Wi-Fi packets through hundreds, or even thousands,
of short-range transceivers that are located close to each other.
๏ Metalanguage: a language that can be used to define other languages.
๏ Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME): a set of rules for handling binary
files, such as word-processing documents, spreadsheets, photos, or sound clips that are
attached to e-mail messages.
๏ Net bandwidth: the actual amount of data that is transmitted per second.
๏ Network access points (NAPs): originally located in San Francisco, New York,
Chicago, and Washington, D.C., each operated by a separate telecommunications
company.
๏ Network access providers: sell Internet access rights directly to larger customers and
indirectly to smaller firms and individuals
๏ Network Address Translation (NAT) device: converts private IP addresses into
normal IP addresses when it forwards packets from computers to the Internet.
๏ Network Control Protocol (NCP): protocol used by ARPANET.
๏ Network specification: the set of rules that equipment connected to the network must
follow.
๏ Newsgroups: the more than 1000 different topic areas used by Usenet.
๏ Ontology: a set of standards that defines, in detail, the relationships among RDF
standards and specific XML tags within a particular knowledge domain.
๏ Open architecture: included the use of a common protocol for all computers connected
to the Internet and four key rules for message handling.
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๏ Opening tag: HTML tag that formats text.
๏ Optical fiber: technology used by NAPs.
๏ Packet-switched (network): on this network, files and e-mail messages are broken
down into small pieces, called packets, that are labeled electronically with their origins,
sequences, and destination addresses.
๏ Packets: files and e-mail messages are broken down into small pieces.
๏ pCell: a system that creates a network of โpersonal cellsโ for each mobile device that
allows each device access to the full speed of the network.
๏ Personal area networks (PANs): small Bluetooth networks.
๏ Piconets: small Bluetooth networks.
๏ Plain old telephone service (POTS): uses existing telephone lines and an analog
modem to provide a bandwidth of between 28 and 56 Kbps.
๏ Post Office Protocol (POP): used by an e-mail client program running on a userโs
computer to request mail from the organizationโs e-mail server.
๏ Private IP addresses: a series of IP numbers that are not permitted on packets that
travel on the Internet.
๏ Private network: a leased-line connection between two companies that physically
connects their intranets to one another.
๏ Proprietary architecture: in the early days of computing, each computer manufacturer
created its own protocol, so computers made by different manufacturers could not be
connected to each other.
๏ Protocol: a collection of rules for formatting, ordering, and error checking data sent
across a network.
๏ Public network: any computer network or telecommunications network that is
available to the public.
๏ Repeaters: transmitter-receiver devices (also called transceivers) that receive the signal
and then retransmit it toward usersโ roof-mounted antennas and to the next repeater.
๏ Resource description framework (RDF): a set of standards for XML syntax. It would
function as a dictionary for all XML tags used on the Web.
๏ Roaming: shifting from one WAP to another, without requiring intervention by the
user.
๏ Router computers: the computers that decide how best to forward each packet.
๏ Routers: the computer that decides how best to forward each packet.
๏ Routing algorithms: rules in programs on router computers that determine the best
path on which to send each packet.
๏ Routing computers: the computers that decide how best to forward each packet.
๏ Routing tables: information stored includes lists of connections that lead to particular
groups of other routers, rules that specify which connections to use first, and rules for
handling instances of heavy packet traffic and network congestion.
๏ Semantic Web: project envisions words on Web pages being tagged (using XML) with
their meanings.
๏ Short message service (SMS): protocol used by many mobile phones have a small
screen and can be used to send and receive short text messages.
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๏ Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP): specifies the format of a mail message and
describes how mail is to be administered on the e-mail server and transmitted on the
Internet.
๏ Software agents: intelligent programs used to read XML tags to determine the meaning
of words in their contexts.
๏ Sponsored top-level domain (sTLD): a TLD for which an organization other than
ICANN is responsible.
๏ Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML): used for many years by the
publishing industry to create documents that needed to be printed in various formats and
that were revised frequently.
๏ Start page: contains one or more links to other pages, and those pages, in turn, link to
other pages.
๏ Style sheet: a set of instructions that gives Web developers more control over the
format of displayed pages.
๏ Subnetting: the use of reserved private IP addresses within LANs and WANs to
provide additional address space.
๏ Symmetric connection: provides the same bandwidth in both directions.
๏ Tags: provide formatting instructions that Web client software can understand.
๏ TCP/IP: the rules that govern how data moves through the Internet and how network
connections are established and terminated.
๏ Text markup language: specifies a set of tags that are inserted into the text.
๏ Third-generation (3G) wireless technology: offers download speeds up to 2 Mbps
and upload speeds up to 800 Kbps.
๏ Top-level domain (TLD): the rightmost part of a domain name.
๏ Transceivers: transmitter-receiver device that receives a signal and then retransmits it
toward usersโ roof-mounted antennas and to the next repeater.
๏ Transmission Control Protocol (TCP): controls the disassembly of a message or a file
into packets before it is transmitted over the Internet, and it controls the reassembly of
those packets into their original formats when they reach their destinations.
๏ Ultra Wideband (UWB): provides wide bandwidth (up to about 480 Mbps in current
versions) connections over short distances (30 to 100 feet).
๏ Uniform Resource Locator (URL): the combination of the protocol name and the
domain name.
๏ Upload bandwidth: a measure of the amount of information that can travel from the
user to the Internet in a given amount of time.
๏ Upstream bandwidth: a measure of the amount of information that can travel from the
user to the Internet in a given amount of time.
๏ Usenet: allows anyone who connects to the network to read and post articles on a
variety of subjects.
๏ Userโs News Network: allows anyone who connects to the network to read and post
articles on a variety of subjects.
๏ Virtual private network (VPN): a connection that uses public networks and their
protocols to send data in a way that protects the data as well as a private network would,
but at a lower cost.
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๏ Web: a subset of the computers on the Internet that are connected to one another in a
specific way that makes them and their contents easily accessible to each other.
๏ Web browser: a software interface that lets users read (or browse) HTML documents
and move from one HTML document to another through text formatted with hypertext
link tags in each file.
๏ Web browser software: software that sends requests for Web page files to other
computers, which are called Web servers.
๏ Web client computers: run software called Web client software or Web browser
software.
๏ Web client software: software that sends requests for Web page files to other
computers, which are called Web servers.
๏ Web server software: receives requests from many different Web clients and responds
by sending files back to those Web client computers.
๏ Web servers: runs software called Web server software.
๏ Wide area networks (WANs): networks of computers that are connected over greater
distances.
๏ Wi-Fi: the most common wireless connection technology for use on LANs.
๏ Wireless access point (WAP): a device that transmits network packets between Wi-Fiequipped computers and other devices that are within its range.
๏ Wireless Ethernet: the most common wireless connection technology for use on
LANs.
๏ World Wide Web: subset of the computers on the Internet that are connected to one
another in a specific way that makes them and their contents easily accessible to each
other.
๏ World Wide Web Consortium (W3C): a not-for-profit group that maintains standards
for the Web.
๏ Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX): a 4G wireless
technology that offers download speeds up to 14 Mbps and upload speeds up to 8 Mbps.
๏ XML parsers: programs that can format an XML file so it can appear on the screen of
a computer, a tablet device, a smartphone, an Internet capable mobile phone, or some
other device.
๏ XML schemas: common standards for XML tags that are available for a number of
industries.
๏ XML vocabulary: a set of XML tag definitions.
๏ ZigBee: a short-range wireless technology that was developed to be low cost and run on
very little power.
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CHAPTER 2
Technology
Infrastructure: The
Internet and the World
Wide Web
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
Click to edit Master
title style
Learning
Objectives
In this chapter, you will learn:
โข About the origin, growth, and current structure of the
Internet
โข How packet-switched networks are combined to
form the Internet
โข How Internet, e-mail, and Web protocols work
โข About Internet addressing and how Web domain
names are constructed
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2
Click toObjectives
edit Master title style (contโd.)
Learning
โข About the history and use of markup languages on
the Web
โข How HTML tags and links work
โข About the cost and performance of Internet
connections technologies
โข About Internet2 and the Semantic Web
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3
Introduction
Click to edit Master title style
โข More Internet users are using smartphones or
tablets
โ High mobile device usage is taxing existing
technologies and threatening to overloading networks
โข Current solution is for wireless providers to add
more cell phone towers
โ Expensive and locations can be hard to find
โข With mobile data traffic expected to triple by 2018,
the search for alternatives is underway
โ pCell technology creates a network of personal cells
based on each device
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4
Clickand
to edit Master
style
The Internet
the title
World
Wide Web
โข Computer network is any technology allowing
people to connect computers to each other
โข internet (small โiโ) is a group of interconnected
computer networks
โข Internet (capital โIโ) connects networks all over the
world
โข World Wide Web (Web) is a subset of Internet
computers that are connected to each other
โ Includes easy-to-use interfaces
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5
Click to edit
style
Origins
ofMaster
thetitleInternet
โข Early 1960s
โ Defense Department nuclear attack concerns
โ Powerful computers (large mainframes)
โ Leased telephone company lines established a single
connection between sender and receiver
โ Single connection risk solution
โข Communicate using multiple channels (packets)
โข 1969 Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA)
โ Packet network connected four computers
โข ARPANET: earliest network (became the Internet)
โข Academic research use (1970s and 1980s)
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6
to edit Master
title style
New Click
Uses
for the
Internet
โข E-mail (1972) became widely used quickly
โข Military and education research users continued to
grow and mailing lists first appeared
โข 1979: Usenet (Userโs News Network) created
โ Continues today with newsgroups
โข Network applications improved and tested by an
increasing number of users from 1979 to 1989
โ Security problems recognized
โข 1980s: personal computer use explosion
โ Academic and research networks merged into the
Internet
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7
Click to edit
Master of
title style
Commercial
Use
the Internet
โข National Science Foundation (NSF)
โ Provided funding
โ Prohibited commercial network traffic so businesses
turned to commercial e-mail providers
โข Larger firms built networks (leased telephone lines)
โข 1989: NSF permitted two commercial e-mail
services (MCI Mail and CompuServe)
โ Commercial enterprises could send e-mail
โ Research, education communities sent e-mail directly
to MCI Mail and CompuServe
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Click to edit
style
Growth
ofMaster
thetitleInternet
โข In 1991 the NSF further eased commercial Internet
activity restrictions
โข Privatization of the Internet completed in 1995
โ Operations turned over to privately owned companies
โข Internet based on four network access points (NAPs)
โข Network access providers sell Internet access rights
directly and through Internet service providers
(ISPs)
โข Consistent and dramatic growth in the number of
Internet hosts (computers directly connected to the
Internet) to more than 1 billion today
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FIGURE 2-1 Growth of the Internet
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to edit Master title
TheClickInternet
of style
Things
โข Connection of devices not used by persons is
rapidly increasing
โ Switches, optical scanners, and sensors can be
connected to the Internet and used to automatically
manage environmental or security issues
โ Some business transactions can be conducted
without human intervention
โข The Internet of things is the term used for these
devices and automatic transaction processing
โ Estimated 10 billion devices now and expected to
reach 40 billion by 2020
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Packet-Switched
Networks
โข Local area network (LAN) is a network of computers
located close together
โข Wide area network (WAN) is a network of computers
connected over greater distances
โข Telephone call establishes a single connection path
between caller and receiver then transmits data
along that single path or circuit
โ Circuit switching is centrally controlled, singleconnection model
โ Not resistant to failure because a break in any circuit
causes interruption and data loss
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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title style
Packet-Switched
Networks
(contโd.)
โข Packet-switched network breaks files and e-mail
messages into small pieces called packets
โ Labelled electronically with origin, sequences and
destination addresses
โ Travel along interconnected networks until reaching
destination
โข Can take different paths
โข May arrive out of order
โ Destination computer
โข Collects packets
โข Reassembles original file or e-mail message
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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title style
Routing
Packets
โข Routing computers forward each packet
โ Routers, gateway computers, border or edge routers
โข Routing algorithms are applied to information stored
in routing tables or configuration tables
โข Hubs, switches, and bridges move packets from one
part of the network to another
โข Routers connect networks to other networks and
usually perform the required translation function
โข Internet backbone are telecommunication lines and
routers between Internetโs main collecting points
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ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-2 Router-based architecture of the Internet
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Master title style
PublicClick
and
Private
Networks
โข Public network is available to the public and does
not provide much security as part of its basic
structure
โข Private network is a leased-line connection between
two companies that physically connects their
computers or networks together
โข Leased line is a permanent telephone connection
between two points
โ Advantage: security
โ Drawback: cost
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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title style
Virtual Click
Private
Network
(VPN)
โข Connection via public networks to send data in a
way that protects it as well as a private network at a
lower cost
โ Uses IP tunneling (encapsulation) system to create a
private passageway through public Internet
โข Encapsulation encrypts packet content and places it
inside another packet
โ IP wrapper: outer packet
โข โVirtualโ since connection seems permanent but is
actually a temporary connection
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Master title
style
Intranets
Extranets
โข Intranet
โ An Internet within the boundaries of the organization
โ Interconnected private networks
โข Extranet
โ An Internet that extends beyond the organization and
incorporates networks of outside entities
โข Technologies (public networks, private networks, or
VPNs)
โ Independent of organizational boundaries
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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title style
Internet
Protocols
โข Protocol is a collection of rules across a network
โ Computers that communicate with each other must
use same protocol for data transmission
โข ARPANET: Network Control Protocol (NCP)
โข Proprietary architecture (closed architecture)
โ Manufacturer creates own protocol
โข Open architecture (Internet core)
โ Uses common protocol
โ Four key message-handling rules
โ Contributed to the Internetโs success
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19
TCP/IP
Click to edit Master title style
โข Refers to the two main protocols used by the
Internet today
โข Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
โ Controls message or file disassembly into packets
before Internet transmission
โ Controls packet reassembly into original formats at
destinations
โข Internet Protocol (IP)
โ Specifies addressing details for each packet
โ Labels packet with origination and destination
addresses
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IP Addressing
Click to edit Master title style
โข Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) used since 1981
โข IP address is a 32-bit number identifying computers
โข Computers use base 2 (binary) number system
โ Digit: 0 or a 1 (on or off condition)
โ Four billion different addresses
โข Router breaks message into packets that contain
source and destination IP address
โข With dotted decimal notation IP addresses appear
as four numbers separated by periods
โข Three NFP organizations assign IP addresses
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Click to edit Master title(contโd.)
style
IP Addressing
โข ARIN Whois server returns IP address list owned by
an organization in North America
โข New devices creating high demand for IP addresses
โ Subnetting is the use of reserved private IP LAN
(WAN) addresses to provide more space
โข Last IPv4 addresses allocated summer 2015
โข Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) replaces IPv4 and
uses 128-bit number for addresses
โ Available addresses: 34 followed by 37 zeros
โ More complex hexadecimal (16) notation system
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style
Electronic
MailtitleProtocols
โข Electronic mail (e-mail) must be formatted according
to common set of rules
โ Most organizations use a client/server structure
โข E-mail server computer devoted to e-mail handling
โ Software stores and forwards e-mail messages
โข E-mail client software reads and sends e-mail
โ Communicates with e-mail server software
โ Many e-mail services are offered by Web sites
โข Standardization and rules are essential
โข Two common protocols are used for e-mail
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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ClickMail
to edit Master
title style
Electronic
Protocols
(contโd.)
โข Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) specifies mail
message format, and describes mail administration
and transmission
โข Post Office Protocol (POP) messages send mail to
userโs computer and either deletes or does not
delete it or asks if new mail has arrived
โข Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) is a
set of rules for handling binary files
โข Interactive Mail Access Protocol (IMAP) performs
the same basic POP functions but has some
additional features
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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style
Web Page Request
andtitleDelivery
Protocols
โข Web client computers run Web client software (Web
browser software)
โ Examples include Google Chrome, Microsoft Internet
Explorer, Apple Safari and Mozilla Firefox
โข Sends Web page file requests to other computers (Web
servers)
โข Web server computer runs Web server software
โ Receives requests from many different Web clients
and send back files
โข Client/server architecture
โ Combination: client and Web server computers
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
25
Web Page Request
and
Delivery
Protocols
Click to edit Master title style
(contโd.)
โข Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
โ Internet Web page file delivery rules
โข Web page request using Web browser
โ User types protocol name
โข Followed by โ//:โ characters before the domain name
โ Uniform Resource Locator (URL)
โข Combination: protocol name, domain name
โข Locates resources (Web page) on another computer
(Web server)
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click of
to edit
Master
title style Wide Web
Emergence
the
World
โข Web
โ Software running on Internet-connected computers
โ Generates network traffic
โข Web software: largest single traffic category
โข Outpaces: e-mail, file transfers, and other data
transmission traffic
โ Web resulted from new ways of thinking about
information storage and retrieval
โข Key technological Web elements
โ Hypertext
โ Graphical user interfaces
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit Master titleof
styleHypertext
The Development
โข 1945: Vannevar Bush: The Atlantic Monthly article
โ Visionary ideas: future technology uses (Memex)
โข 1960s: Ted Nelson described a page-linking system
โ Douglas Engelbart: experimental hypertext system
โข 1987: Nelson published Literary Machines
โ Outlined project Xanadu an online global hypertext
publishing and commerce system
โข 1989: Tim Berners-Lee proposed development
project to provide data-sharing functionality
โ Developed hypertext server program code
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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title style
The Development
of Hypertext
(contโd.)
โข Hypertext server stores files written in Hypertext
Markup Language (HTML) which is used for the
creation of Web pages
โ Called Web servers today
โข HTML is a language that includes a set of codes
(tags) attached to text
โ Describes relationships among text elements
โข Hypertext link (hyperlink)
โ Points to another location
โ Same or another HTML document
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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to edit Master title style
GraphicalClickInterfaces
for Hypertext
โข Web browser
โ Software lets users read (browse) HTML documents
and move from one HTML document to another
through text formatted with hypertext link tags in file
โข Graphical user interface (GUI)
โ Presents program control functions, output to users,
and input from users
โ Pictures, icons, and other graphical elements
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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ClickWorld
to edit Master
title styleWeb
The
Wide
โข World Wide Web: Berners-Leeโs name for system of
hyperlinked HTML documents
โ Quick acceptance in scientific research community
โข 1993: GUI program (Mosaic) that could read HTML
โ Used HTML hyperlinks for page-to-page navigation
โ First Web browser widely available for personal
computers and still in use today
โข Easy access to Internet information through system
of pages connected by hypertext links
โ Profit-making potential recognized by businesses
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit
Master Web
title style (contโd.)
The World
Wide
โข Netscape Communications founded in 1994
โ Netscape Navigator Web browser (based on Mosaic)
โ Microsoft: Internet Explorer (most widely used)
โ Mozilla Firefox: Netscape Navigator descendant
โข Number of Web sites has grown more rapid growth
than the Internet itself
โ More than 800 million Web sites
โ Over a trillion individual Web pages
โ 2010 to 2011: number of Web sites doubled
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-3 Growth of the World Wide Web
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
33
The Deep Web
Click to edit Master title style
โข Web provides access to customized pages created
in response to a userโs query
โ Pull content from databases
โ Example: search for โonline businessโ book on
Amazon.com
โข Deep Web: Store of information available through
the Web
โ Potentially trillions of Web pages available using deep
Web
โ Difficult or impossible to search because available
data that is never requested remains hidden
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34
Domain Names
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โข Dotted decimal notation difficult to remember
โข Domain names are sets of words assigned to
specific IP addresses
โ Example: www.sandiego.edu
โข Contains three parts separated by periods
โข Top-level domain (TLD): rightmost part
โข Generic top-level domains (gTLDs)
โข Sponsored top-level domains (sTLD)
โข Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN)
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ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-4 Commonly used domain names
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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style
Markup Languages
the Web
โข Text markup language specifies a set of tags
inserted into text
โข Markup tags (tags) provide formatting instructions
Web client software understands
โข Most commonly used markup language is HTML
โ Subset of Generalized Markup Language (SGML)
โข World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) maintains Web
standards
โข Extensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML)
โ HTML version 4.0 reformulation as XML application
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit
Master title style
Hypertext
Markup
Language
โข Hypertext elements are text elements related to
each other
โข HTML is the prevalent markup language to create
Web documents
โ W3C HTML Working Group page maintains detailed
HTML versions and related topic information
โ HTML version 5.0 was released in 2014
โข SGML is a metalanguage that can be used to define
other languages
โ Extensible Markup Language (XML) was derived from
SGML and is used to tag shared information
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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FIGURE 2-5 Development of markup languages
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
39
HTML Tags
Click to edit Master title style
โข Interpreted by the Web browser and used to format
the display of text enclosed by the tags
โ Enclosed in angle brackets ()
โ Most have an opening tag and closing tag that format
the text between them
โ Closing tag is preceded by slash within the angle
brackets ()
โข User may customize tag interpretations so that
different browsers display tagged text differently
โข Tags are generally written in lowercase letters
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit
Master title
style
HTML
Tags
(contโd.)
โข One-sided tags require opening tag only
โ Common example is the tag that creates a line break
โข Some two-sided tags have an optional closing tag
โ Common example is the paragraph tag
โข Opening tag may contain one or more property
modifiers that refines how the tag operates
โข Other frequently used HTML tags allow Web
designers to include graphics and format text as
tables
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
41
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-6 Text marked up
with HTML tags
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
42
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-7 Text marked up with HTML tags as it
appears in a Web browser
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
43
HTML Links
Click to edit Master title style
โข Hyperlinks on interlinked pages form a โwebโ of
those pages
โข Linear hyperlink structure reads Web page in serial
fashion
โ Works well when customer fills out form
โข Hierarchical hyperlink structure uses an introductory
page (home page, start page) that links to other
pages
โ Site map often available for hierarchical sites
โข HTML creates hyperlinks using HTML anchor tags
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
44
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-8 Linear vs. nonlinear paths through documents
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ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-9 Three common Web page organization structures
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit Master
title style
Cascading
Style
Sheets
โข Style sheet is a set of instructions that gives Web
developers control over displayed page formatting
โ Usually stored in a separate file and referenced using
HTML style tag
โ May be included in Web pageโs HTML file
โข Cascading style sheets (CSS) can be applied to
each Web page, one on top of the other
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to edit MasterLanguage
title style
ExtensibleClick
Markup
(XML)
โข HTML not a good tool for presenting large amounts
of business data so designers turned to XML
โ Uses paired start and stop tags to define the structure
of a collection of data
โ Includes data-management capabilities HTML cannot
provide
โข Greatest strength (and weakness) of XML is that it
allows users to define their own tags
โ Many companies have agreed to common standards
for XML tags (data-type definitions (DTDs) or XML
schemas) which are available for many industries
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48
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-10 Country list
data marked up with HTML
tags
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
49
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-11 Country list data
as it appears in a Web
browser
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
50
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-12 Country list data marked up with XML
tags
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
51
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-13 Country list data marked up with XML
displayed in a Web browser
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
52
ExtensibleClick
Markup
Language
(XML)
to edit Master title style
(contโd.)
โข Available DTDs or XML schemas include
โ LegalXML for the legal profession
โ MathML for mathematical and scientific information
โ Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) for
accounting and financial information standards
โข Set of XML tag definitions called an XML vocabulary
โข XML files usually not intended to display in browser
โ Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) contains
formatting instructions
โ XML parsers format XML file for device screen
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53
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-14 Processing requests for Web pages from an XML
database
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
54
ClickConnection
to edit Master title style Options
Internet
โข Internet is a set of interconnected networks
โข Organizations connect computers using a network
โข Many families have their home computers
connected using a network
โข Mobile phones are connected to the wireless phone
service providerโs network
โข Internet access providers (IAPs) or ISPs
โ Provide Internet access to individuals, businesses,
other organizations
โ Offer several connection options
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Click to edit Master title
style
Connectivity
Overview
โข Common connection options are voice-grade
telephone lines, various types of broadband
connections, leased lines, wireless
โข Bandwidth is the amount of data traveling through
communication medium per unit of time
โ Net bandwidth is actual data transmitted per second
โ Symmetric connections provide the same bandwidth
both directions
โ Asymmetric connections provide different bandwidths
for each direction
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
56
Click to edit Master title
style
Connectivity
Overview
โข Two bandwidth types in an asymmetric connection
are
โ Upstream bandwidth (upload bandwidth) is a
measure of amount of information that can travel from
the user to the Internet in a given amount of time
โ Downstream bandwidth (download, downlink
bandwidth) is a measure of amount of information
from the Internet to user in a given amount of time
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
57
Click to
edit Master title styleConnections
Voice-Grade
Telephone
โข Used in early days of Web
โข Plain old telephone service (POTS) uses existing
telephone lines, analog modem
โ Bandwidth between 28 and 56 Kbps
โข Total most people use higher bandwidth connection
options
โ Speeds greater than 200 Kbps are called broadband
services
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
58
Click to edit Master Services
title style
Broadband
โข Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) is a higher grade of
telephone service that does not use a modem
โ Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) bandwidths
from 100 to 640 Kbps upstream and 1 to 15 Mbps
downstream
โ DSL: Private line with no competing traffic
โข Cable modems connect to the television cable
โ Bandwidths from client to server: 500 Kbps to 15
Mbps with downstream as high as 10 Mbps
โ Connection bandwidths vary with number of
subscribers competing for shared resource
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
59
Click to edit Master
title style
Leased-Line
Connections
โข Large firms can connect to an ISP using higher
bandwidths leased from telecommunications carriers
โ Classified by equivalent number of telephone lines
included which are more expensive than other options
โข DS0 (digital signal zero) carries one digital signal (56
Kbps); T1 line (DS1) carries 24 DS0 lines (1.544
Mbps); T3 (DS3): 44.736 Mbps
โข Technologies used include frame relay,
asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) and optical fiber
(instead of copper wire)
โ Bandwidth determined by fiber-optic cable class
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
60
Click to edit
Master title style(Wi-Fi)
Wireless
Ethernet
โข Most common wireless connection technology that
is also called 802.11
โ Latest version is 802.11ac with bandwidth ranges up
to 2.5 Gbps and a range of 500 feet
โ Speed impacted by objects the signals pass through
โข Wireless access point (WAP) transmits packets
between Wi-Fi-equipped computers and other
devices within range
โ Devices capable of roaming or shifting from one WAP
to another without human intervention
โ Hot sports are WAPs open to the public
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
61
to editNetworks
Master title style (Piconets)
Personal Click
Area
โข Bluetooth is a low-bandwidth technology (722 Kbps)
designed for personal use over short distances
โ Useful for wireless synchronization and printing
โ Devices consume very little power and can discover one
another and exchange information automatically
โข Ultra Wideband (UWB) provides bandwidth up to 480
Mbps and connections over short distances
โ Future personal area networking applications
โข ZigBee is a low bandwidth technology with applications
designed for energy management and remote controls
for consumer electronics
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
62
Click to edit Master Wireless
title style
Fixed-Point
โข Used in rural areas without cable service
โข System of repeaters used to forward radio signal
from ISP to customers
โข Repeaters are transmitter-receiver devices
(transceivers)
โข Uses mesh routing
โ Directly transmits Wi-Fi packets through short-range
transceivers (hundreds or thousands)
โ Located close to each other
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
63
Click to edit Master
title style
Satellite
Microwave
โข Made connections to the Internet possible for the
first time in many rural areas
โข Use microwave transmitters that provide upload
bandwidths in the range of 120 Kbps to 5 Mbps and
downloads in the 1-16 Mbps range
โข Installation cost has decreased due to improved
technologies that allow self-installation
โข Offered by airlines
โข Once the only wireless Internet access available, but
many other options now exist
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
64
to edit Master title style
MobileClickTelephone
Networks
โข Number of mobile phones in 2014 (almost 8 billion)
exceeded population for the first time in history
โข Short message service (SMS) protocol
โ Send and receive short text messages
โข Third-generation (3G) wireless technology
โ 2 Mbps download/800 Kbps upload speeds
โข Fourth-generation (4G) technology
โ Long Term Evolution (LTE) and Worldwide
Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX) offer
14 Mbps download/ 8Mbps upload speeds
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
65
ยฉ Cengage Learning 2017
FIGURE 2-15 Internet connection options
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license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
66
to edit the
Master Semantic
title style
Internet2Clickand
Web
โข Internet2 is an advanced research network created
in 1996 as a replacement for ARPANET laboratory
โ Experimental networking technologies test bed
โ High end of the bandwidth spectrum (10 Gbps)
โ Used by universities, medical schools, CERN
โ Focus: mainly technology development
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
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Electronic Commerce 12th Edition Gary Schneider Solutions Manual
Full Download: http://testbanklive.com/download/electronic-commerce-12th-edition-gary-schneider-solutions-manual/
to editSemantic
Master title style Web (contโd.)
Internet2 andClickthe
โข Semantic Web project has a goal of blending
technologies and information
โ Web pages tagged (using XML) with meanings
โ Uses software agents (intelligent programs) to read
XML tags, determine meaning of words
โข Resource description framework (RDF)
โข Set of XML syntax standards
โ Development of Semantic Web will take many years
โข Start with ontologies for specific subjects
ยฉ 2017 Cengage Learningยฎ. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a
license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.
Full download all chapters instantly please go to Solutions Manual, Test Bank site: testbanklive.com
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