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Web Glossary

ActiveX - A Microsoft standard for computer program building blocks, known as objects.

Address - Internet users encounter two important types of addresses: e-mail to someone; e-mail addresses almost always contain an @ and Web page addresses (more properly called URL's).

Anonymous FTP - A way of using the FTP program to log on to another computer to copy files, even though you don’t have an account on the other computer. When you log on, you type anonymous as the username and your e-mail address as the password.

Applet - A small computer program written in the Java programming language. You can download applets by using a Web browser. Applets must obey special rules that make it difficult for the programs to do damage to your computer.

Archive - A single file containing a group of files that have been compressed and glommed to gather for efficient storage. You have to use a program such as Win Zip, PKZIP, tar or Stuff to get the original files back out.

Attachment - A computer file electronically stapled to an e-mail message and sent along with it.

B

Backbone - The high-speed communications links that connect Internet providers and other large Internet sites together.

Band -The number of electrical symbols per second that a modem sends down a phone line. Often used as a synonym for BPS (bits per second); although this usage in incorrect, only 43 people on the entire plant know why or care. Named after J. M. E. Baudot, inventor to the Teletype.

BCC - Blind carbon copy, BCC addressees get a copy of your e-mail without other recipients knowing about it.

Binary file - A file that contains information other than text. A binary file might contain an archive, a picture, sounds, a spreadsheet, or a word-processing document that includes formatting codes in addition to text characters.

Bin Hex - A file-encoding system popular among Macintosh users.

Bit - The smallest unit of measure for computer data. Bits can be on or off (symbolized by 1 or 0) and are used in various combinations to represent different types of information.

Bitmap - Little dots put together to make a black-and white or color picture.

Bookmark - The address of a Web page to which you may want to return.

Blog - A blog is essentially a formatted web page with a sequential series of posts and replies on a particular subject. A Web LOG is a journal kept on the Internet. Blog is short for weblog.

Bounce- To return as undeliverable or redeliver to the appropriate address. If you mail a message to a bad address, it bounces back to your mailbox. If you get e-mail intended for someone else, you can bounce it to her.

BPS (bits per second) - A measure of how fast data is transmitted. Often used to describe modem speed.

Browser - A program that lets you read information on the World Wide Web. The two most popular Internet browsers are Netscape and Microsoft’s Internet Explorer

C


CC -Carbon copy. - CC addressees get a copy of your e-mail, and other recipients are informed of it if they bother to read the message header.

Chat- An Internet feature that allows two or more people to communicate love with each other by typing messages. This is like a telephone conversation, but using typed messages on computer.

Chat Room - Refers to a theoretical room in cyberspace where individuals with a similar interest meet together to “chat.”

Client- Refers to a computer attached to any network, including the Internet. The term is also used to describe personal-computer software that gives access to and enables the use of the Internet, either by modem connection or by connection to a local area network (LAN) and related hardware. A client can also refer to a program like a web browser that you use to retrieve data, or a service, from a server on the Internet.

Client/server model - A division of labor between computers. Computers that provide a service other computers can use are know as servers. The users are clients.

Com. - When these letters appear as the last part of an address (in net. Gurus. Com, for example), it indicates that the host computer is run by a commercial organization, Probably in the United States.

Cookie - A small text file stored on your computer by a Web site you have visited used to remind that site about you the next time you visit it.

Country code - the last part of a geo-graphic address, which indicates in which country the host computer, is located, such as us for the United States. Country codes are always two letters.

Cyber - A prefix meaning the use of the computers and networks that comprise the Internet, as in cyberspace or cybercop.

D

DES - (Data Encryption Standard) A U.S. government standard for encrypting unclassified data. Breakable at some expense, although a newer version, triple-DES, is probably safe.

Digest - A compilation of the messages that have been posted to a mailing list recently.

Dial-up Networking - The built-in Internet communication program in Windows.

Domain - Part of the official name of a computer on the Net ¾for example, save.com to register a domain name, go to www.icann.org/registrars/ accredited-list.html and choose a registry.

Domain name server (DNS) - A computer on the Internet that translates between Internet domain names, such as instantly .com, and Internet numerical addresses, such as 208.13.47.47. Sometimes just called a name server.

Download - To copy a file from a remote computer “down” to your computer.

E

eBay -The original and most successful Web-based auction, at www.eBay.com

edu - When these letters appear as the last part of an address (www. school.edu, for example). It indicates that the host computer is run by an educational institution, usually a college or university in the United States.

e-Commerce - Electronic commerce, mainly buying and selling goods and services over the Internet.

E-mail - Electronic messages sent via the Internet.

Eudora - A popular mail-handling program that runs on the Macintosh and under Windows. Eudora Lite is freeware, and Eudora pro is commercial. Both are excellent. Find them on the Web at www.eudora.com

Extranet - An Internet technology used to connect a company with its customers and business partners.

F

FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) - An article that answers questions that comes up often. Many mailing lists and Usenet newsgroups have FAQ's that are posted regularly.

Favorites - A list of files or Web pages you plan to use frequently.

Firewall - A specially programmed computer that connects a local network to the Internet and, for security reasons, lets only certain kinds of messages in and out.

Freenet - A free (except in Los Angeles) online system offering local communities information and limited access to the Internet. Dying out, now that there are free ISP's.

FTP (File Transfer Protocol) - A method of transferring files from one computer to the other over the Net.

FTP server - A computer on the Internet that stores files for transmission by FTP.

G

Gateway - A computer that connects one network with another, where the two networks uses different protocols.

GIF - (Graphics Interchange Format) A patented type of graphics file originally defined by CompuServe and now found all over the Net. Files in this format end in, gif and are called GIF files or just GIF's. Pronounced “jif” unless you prefer to say “gif”.

giga - Prefix meaning one billion (1,000,000,000).

Google - A search engine used for finding things on the World Wide Web, with extra smarts to look for the most useful pages.

Gopher - an Internet system that let’s you find information by using menus, make obsolete by the Web.

Gov - When these letters appear as the last part of an address, it indicates that the host computer is run by some government body, probably the U.S. federal government.

H

Header - The beginning of an e-mail message containing To and From addresses, subject, date, and other gobbledygook important to the programs that handle your mail.


Home page - The entry page, or main page, of a Web site, if you have a home page, it’s the main page about you. A home page usually contains links to other Web pages.

Host - A computer on the Internet.

Hostname - the name of a computer on the Internet

HTML - (Hypertext Markup Language) The language used to write pages for the World Wide Web. This language lets the text include codes that define fonts, layout, embedded graphics, and hypertext links.

HTTP - (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) The way in which World Wide Web pages are transferred over the Net URL's for Web pages start with http://, although you almost never have to type it.

HTTPS - A variant of HTTP that encrypts messages for security.

Hypertext - A system of writing and displaying text that enables the text to be linked in multiple ways, be available at several levels of detail, and contain links to related documents. The World Wide Web uses both hypertext and hypermedia.

I

ICQ - “I Seek You,” a popular paging and instant message system that lets users track which of their friends are online and exchange instant messages with them.

Internet - All the computers that are connected together into an amazingly huge global network so that they can talk to each other. When you connect your computer to your Internet service provider, your computer becomes part of threat network.

Internet Explorer - A Web browser vigorously promoted by Microsoft that comes in Windows, Mac, and (arguably) UNIX flavors.

Internet Relay Chat (IRC) - A system that enables Internet folks to talk to each other in real-time (rather than after a delay, as with e-mail messages).

Intranet - A private version of the Internet that lets people within an organization exchange data by using popular Internet tools, such as browsers.

IP address - a unique Internet Protocol address assigned to a specific computer connected to the Internet. An IP address can be compared to the physical address of a house or business. A letter sent from one address to another will usually include the address of the sender and the address of the recipient. Likewise, when a computer on the Internet sends a request for information from another computer, the request is sent with both the sender' s IP address and the recipient's IP address. The receiving computer responds by sending the requested information back to the IP address of the computer that make the request.

ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) - A faster, digital phone service that operates at speeds as high as 128 kilobits per second.

Internet Service Provider (ISP) - is an Internet Service Provider. It is a company that maintains a constant connection to the Internet and sells Internet access to individuals and /or businesses. The term is also synonymous with Internet Access Provider, Access Provider and Access Service Provider.

J

Java - A computer language invented by Sun Microsystems. because Java programs can run on many different kinds of computers, Java makes it easier to deliver application programs over the Internet.

JPEG - A type of still-image file found all over the Net. Files in this format end in .jpg or .jpeg and are called JPEG (pronounced "JAY-peg") files. Stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group.


K


Kbyte - 1,024 bytes, Also written KB or just plain K. Usually used as a measure of a computer's memory or hard disk storage, or as a measure of file size.

Kilo - Prefix meaning on thousand (1,000) of often, with computer, 1,024.

L

Link - a hypertext connection that can take you to another document or another part of the same document. On the World Wide Web, links appear as text or pictures that are highlighted. To follow a link, you click the highlighted material. See also hypertext.

List server - E-mail mailing list management program: a program that maintains the subscriber list and distributes list posting to those subscribers.

Lynx - A character-based World Wide Web browser. No pictures, but it's fast.

M

Mail server - A computer on the Internet that provides mail services for mail clients.

mega - Prefix meaning one million (1,000,000).

Microsoft Network (MSN) - A commercial online service that provides many Internet services, including e-mail and access to the World Wide Web.

Modem - A gizmo that lets your computer talk on the phone or cable TV. Derived from modulator/demodulator.

MPEG - A type of video file found on the Net. Files in this format end in .mpg. Stands for Moving Picture Experts Group.

N

net - A network, or (when capitalized) the Internet itself. When these letters appear as the last part of an address (in www. yoursite.net, for example), it indicates that the host computer is run be a net- working organization, frequently an ISP in the United States.

Netscape Navigator - A popular Web browser that comes in Windows, Mac, and UNIX flavors. Part of the Netscape Communicator suite of programs.

Network - Computers that are connected together, by a common communications protocol.

Newsgroup - One of thousands of discussion groups on the Internet where people with similar interests can post messages.

O

Opers - A small, fast Web browser from Opera Software in Norway.

Online - Online means a computer is connected to the Internet.

P

Packet - A chunk of information sent over a network. Each packet contains the address it's going to and the address from which it came.

Page - A document, or hunk of information, available by way of the World Wide Web. Each page can contain text, graphics files, sound files, video clips.

Password - A secret code used to keep things private.

PDF file - A method for distributing for matted documents over the Net. You need a special reader program called Acrobat.

Plug-in - A computer program you add to your browser to help it handle a special type of file.

Protocol - The agreed-on rules that computers rely on to talk among themselves. A set of signals that mean "go ahead," "got it," "didn't get it," "didn't get it. please resend," "all done," and so on.

Q

QuickTime - a video and multimedia file format invented by Apple Computer and widely used on the Net.

R

RealAudio - A popular streaming audio file format that lets you listen to programs over the Net.

Router - A small machine that takes information from any computer and transfers the data between two networks that use the same protocols.

RSS XML - Really Simple Syndication (RSS) is a lightweight XML format designed for sharing headlines and other Web content.

S

Search engine - A program used to search for things on the Web.

Secure Server - A Web server than uses encryption to prevent others from reading messages to or from your browser.

Storefront - Term for an e-commerce enabled website on the We.

Spam - E-mail sent to thousands of uninterested recipients or Usenet messages posted to many uninterested newsgroups or mailing lists.

Surfing - Wandering around the World Wide Web.

T

TCP/IP - The way networks communicate with each other on the Net. It stands for Transfer Control Protocol / Internet.

Thread - A message posted to a mailing list or Usenet newsgroup, together with all the follow-up messages, the follow-up to follow-ups, and so on.

Timed out - The equivalent of getting a busy signal or being cut off from the computer you are accessing via the Internet.

U

UNIX - A computer operating system with powerful networking features. Linux is now the most popular version.

Upload - To copy your stuff to somebody else's computer.

URL (Uniform Resource Locator) - A standardized way of naming network resources, used for linking pages on the World Wide Web.

Usenet - A system of thousands of newsgroups. You read the messages by using a newsreader.

V

Viewer - A program to show you files that contain stuff other than text.

Virtual reality - A 3-D visual computer simulation that responds to your input so realistically that you feel you are inside another world.

VRML - A language used for building virtual reality pages on the Web.

W

Webmaster - The person responsible for creating and managing a Web site on the World Wide Web.

WAV file - A popular Windows format for sound files (.wav files) found on the Net.

Web page - A document available on the World Wide Web.

WebTV - An online Internet service that includes hardware (an Internet terminal and remote control) you connect to your TV.

WWW (World Wide Web) - A hypermedia system that lets you browse through lots of interesting information.

X

Xmodem - A protocol for sending filies between computers over dialup phone lines.

Y

Yahoo! - A Web site that provides a subject-oriented guide to the World Wide Web and many other kinds of information.

Z

ZIP file - A file with the extension .zip that has been compressed using ZipMagic, WinZip, or a compatible program.

 

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