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See also: bps, Leased Line
See also: FTP
See also: FTP
See also: Internet (Upper case I), Network, WAN
See also: Application Server, Server
See also: Network
See also: Internet (Upper case I), Listserv ®, Network
See also: Blogosphere or Blogsphere, RSS
See also: Blog
See also: IMHO
See also: Bit
CATP was first used at the Binary Cafe in Cybertown and quickly spread world-wide.
There are reported problems with short-circuits and rust and decaffeinated beverages were not supported until version 1.5.3
See also: Internet (Upper case I), IRC, WAN
See also: SSL
See also: CGI
See also: Internet (Upper case I), Network, Server
Depending on the type of Cookie used, and the Browsers' settings, the Browser may accept or not accept the Cookie, and may save the Cookie for either a short time or a long time.
Cookies might contain information such as login or registration information, online "shopping cart" information, user preferences, etc.
When a Server receives a request from a Browser that includes a Cookie, the Server is able to use the information stored in the Cookie. For example, the Server might customize what is sent back to the user, or keep a log of particular users' requests.
Cookies are usually set to expire after a predetermined amount of time and are usually saved in memory until the Browser software is closed down, at which time they may be saved to disk if their "expire time" has not been reached.
Cookies do not read your hard drive and send your life story to the CIA, but they can be used to gather more information about a user than would be possible without them.
See also: Cyberspace
See also: Cyberpunk
See also: CSS, HTML, JavaScript, Web page
See also: Domain Name, IP Number, Server
wesh.co.uk mail.wesh.co.uk workshop.wesh.co.ukcan all refer to the same machine, but each domain name can refer to no more than one machine.
Usually, all of the machines on a given Network will have the same thing as the right-hand portion of their Domain Names (matisse.net in the examples above). It is also possible for a Domain Name to exist but not be connected to an actual machine. This is often done so that a group or business can have an Internet e-mail address without having to establish a real Internet site. In these cases, some real Internet machine must handle the mail on behalf of the listed Domain Name.
See also: Upload
A common configuration of DSL allows downloads at speeds of up to 1.544 megabits (not megabytes) per second, and uploads at speeds of 128 kilobits per second. This arrangement is called ADSL: Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line.
Another common configuration is symmetrical: 384 Kilobits per second in both directions.
In theory ADSL allows download speeds of up to 9 megabits per second and upload speeds of up to 640 kilobits per second.
DSL is now a popular alternative to Leased Lines and ISDN, being faster than ISDN and less costly than traditional Leased Lines.
See also: ADSL, Bandwidth, ISDN, Leased Line, SDSL
See also: Listserv ®, SMTP
There is more than one type of Ethernet. By 2001 the standard type was "100-BaseT" which can handle up to about 100,000,000 bits-per-second and can be used with almost any kind of computer.
Often an intranet will make use of a Virtual Private Network. (VPN.)
See also: Network
See also: Flame War
See also: Flame
FTP is a way to login to another Internet site for the purposes of retrieving and/or sending files. There are many Internet sites that have established publicly accessible repositories of material that can be obtained using FTP, by logging in using the account name "anonymous", thus these sites are called "anonymous ftp servers".
FTP was invented and in wide use long before the advent of the World Wide Web and originally was always used from a text-only interface.
See also: Byte
Gopher was designed to be much easier to use than FTP, while still using a text-only interface.
Gopher is a Client and Server style program, which requires that the user have a Gopher Client program. Although Gopher spread rapidly across the globe in only a couple of years, it has been largely supplanted by Hypertext, also known as WWW (World Wide Web). There are still thousands of Gopher Servers on the Internet and we can expect they will remain for a while.
The "hyper" in Hypertext comes from the fact that in HTML you can specify that a block of text, or an image, is linked to another file on the Internet. HTML files are meant to be viewed using a "Web Browser".
HTML is loosely based on a more comprehensive system for markup called SGML.
Using IMAP an email client program can not only retrieve email but can also manipulate message stored on the server, without having to actually retrieve the messages. So messages can be deleted, have their status changed, multiple mail boxes can be managed, etc.
IMAP is defined in RFC 2060
See also: Internet (Upper case I), Network
The Internet connects tens of thousands of independent networks into a vast global internet and is probably the largest Wide Area Network in the world.
See also: internet (Lower case i), Network, WAN
See also: Extranet, internet (Lower case i), Internet (Upper case I)
165.113.245.2Every machine that is on the Internet has a unique IP number - if a machine does not have an IP number, it is not really on the Internet. Many machines (especially servers) also have one or more Domain Names that are easier for people to remember.
See also: Domain Name, Server, TCP/IP
See also: Server
Unlike DSL, ISDN can be used to connect to many different locations, one at a time, just like a regular telephone call, as long the other location also has ISDN.
See also: DSL
Java is often used to build large, complex systems that involve several different computers interacting across networks, for example transaction processing systems.
Java is also becoming popular for creating programs that run in small electronic devices, such as mobile telephones.
A very common use of Java is to create programs that can be safely downloaded to your computer through the Internet and immediately run without fear of viruses or other harm to your computer or files. Using small Java programs (called "Applets"), Web pages can include functions such as animations,calculators, and other fancy tricks.See also: Applet, JDK
See also: HTML
See also: Byte
See also: Open Source Software, Unix
See also: BITNET, Internet (Upper case I), Mail list
Noun: The account name used to gain access to a computer system. Not a secret (contrast with Password).
Verb: the act of connecting to a computer system by giving your credentials (usually your "username" and "password")
See also: Password
See also: Email, Listserv ®
Typical uses of Meta tags are to include information for search engines to help them better categorize a page.
You can see the Meta tags in a page if you view the pages' source code.
See also: HTML, Search Engine, SEO
For example, HTML files have a MIME-type of text/html, JPEG files are image/jpeg, etc.
See also: MUD
Mosaic was developed at the National Centre for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign, in Illinois, USA. The first version was released in late 1993.
See also: MOO
See also: MUD
See also: Mosaic
See also: internet (Lower case i)
See also: USENET
See also: Domain Name, Network
See also: Network
Information that is in the Public Domain might also be considered a form of Open Content.
See also: Open Source Software
See also: Open Content
You might think of several caravans of trucks all using the same road system to carry materials.
See also: Internet (Upper case I), Router
5%df(29)But don't use that one!
See also: Login
A Point of Presence usually means a city or location where a network can be connected to, often with dial up phone lines. So if an Internet company says they will soon have a POP in Belgrade, it means that they will soon have a local phone number in Belgrade and/or a place where leased lines can connect to their network.
A second meaning, Post Office Protocol refers to a way that e-mail client software such as Eudora gets mail from a mail server. When you obtain an account from an Internet Service Provider (ISP) you almost always get a POP account with it, and it is this POP account that you tell your e-mail software to use to get your mail. Another protocol called IMAP is replacing POP for email.
On the Internet port often refers to a number that is part of a URL, appearing after a colon (:) right after the domain name. Every service on an Internet server listens on a particular port number on that server. Most services have standard port numbers, e.g. Web servers normally listen on port 80. Services can also listen on non-standard ports, in which case the port number must be specified in a URL when accessing the server, so you might see a URL of the form:
gopher://peg.cwis.uci.edu:7000/
This shows a gopher server running on a non-standard port (the standard gopher port is 70).
Finally, port also refers to translating a piece of software to bring it from one type of computer system to another, e.g. to translate a Windows program so that is will run on a Macintosh.
See also: URL
Most well known as a protocol that allows a computer to use a regular telephone line and a modem to make TCP/IP connections and thus be really and truly on the Internet.
See also: FTP, HTTP, IMAP, POP, PPP, RFC, SLIP, SMTP, SNMP, SSL, TCP/IP, UDP
RDF is also used in XPFE applications to define the relationships between different collections of elements, for example RDF could be used to define the relationship between the data in a database and the way that data is displayed to a user.
See also: Network, Packet Switching
Some search engines work by automatically searching the contents of other systems and creating a database of the results. Other search engines contains only material manually approved for inclusion in a database, and some combine the two approaches.
See also: WWW
See also: SSL
See also: Meta Tag, Search Engine
A single server machine can (and often does) have several different server software packages running on it, thus providing many different servers to clients on the network.
Sometimes server software is designed so that additional capabilities can be added to the main program by adding small programs known as servlets.
Common examples are "Java servlet's", which are small programs written in the Java language and which are added to a web server. Typically a web server that uses Java servlet's will have many of them, each one designed to handle a very specific situation, for example one servlet will handle adding items to a "shopping cart", while a different servlet will handle deleting items from the "shopping cart."
See also: PPP
SMTP is defined in RFC 821 and modified by many later RFC's.
SNMP is defined in RFC 1089
See also: Mail list, USENET
A example of an SQL statement is:
SELECT name,email FROM people_table WHERE country='uk'
See also: Bit, Internet (Upper case I), LAN, Leased Line, Megabyte
See also: Internet (Upper case I), LAN, Leased Line
See also: Internet (Upper case I), IPv4, IPv6, Packet Switching, Unix
See also: Gigabyte
There are a large number of TLD's, for example .biz, .com, .edu, .gov, .info, .int, .mil, .net, .org, and a collection of two-letter TLD's corresponding to the standard two-letter country codes, for example, .us, .ca, .jp, etc.
See also: Domain Name
A Trojan Horse computer program may spread itself by sending copies of itself from the host computer to other computers, but unlike a virus it will (usually) not infect other programs.
See also: Packet Switching, TCP/IP
Apple computers' Macintosh operating system, as of version 10 ("Mac OS X"), is based on Unix.
See also: Download
The first part of a URI is called the "scheme". the most well known scheme is http, but there are many others. Each URI scheme has its own format for how a URI should appear.
Here are examples of URL's using the http, telnet, and news schemes:
http://www.wesh.co.uk/glossary.php
telnet://well.sf.ca.us
news:new.newusers.questions
See also: URI
See also: Newsgroup
Now made obsolete by web-bases search engines.
See also: Gopher, Search Engine
A virus requires the presence of some other program to replicate itself. Typically viruses spread by attaching themselves to programs and in some cases files, for example the file formats for Microsoft word processor and spreadsheet programs allow the inclusion of programs called "macros" which can in some cases be a breeding ground for viruses.
See also: Trojan Horse, Worm
See also: Internet (Upper case I), IPv4, IPv6, Modem, Packet Switching
See also: Internet (Upper case I)
See also: internet (Lower case i), LAN
See also: WWW
http://www.wesh.co.uk/
http://www.wesh.co.uk/seo
http://www.wesh.co.uk/contact
The term has a somewhat informal nature since a large organization might have separate "web sites" for each division, but someone might talk informally about the organizations' "web site" when speaking of all of them.
See also: Ethernet
See also: Trojan Horse, Virus
First, loosely used: the whole constellation of resources that can be accessed using Gopher, FTP, HTTP,telnet, USENET, WAIS and some other tools.
Second, the universe of hypertext servers (HTTP servers), more commonly called "web servers", which are the servers that serve web pages to web browsers.
See also: Browser, FTP, Gopher, HTTP, Internet (Upper case I), Server, URL, Web, Web page
As long as a programmer has the XML definition for a collection of data (often called a "schema") then they can create a program to reliably process any data formatted according to those rules.
See also: CSS, JavaScript, XUL
XUL used to define what the user interface will look like for a particular piece of software. XUL is used to define what buttons, scrollbars, text boxes, and other user-interface items will appear, but it is not used to define how those item will look (e.g. what colour they are).
The most widely used example of XUL use is probably in the Mozilla web browser, where the entire user interface is defined using the XUL language.