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What is the WWW? By J. Richard Stevens
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Topics Brief history of the Internet and WWW Terminology Protocols and Addressing How publishing works Brief history of the Internet and WWW Terminology Protocols and Addressing How publishing works
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History of the Internet/WWW 1958 - Advanced Research Projects Agency established within the Department of Defense 1960 – first networked nodes linked 1969 - First node to node transmission from UCLA to Stanford - also first crash (“logon”) 1970 – first East coast node 1971 - 15 nodes on Internet 1958 - Advanced Research Projects Agency established within the Department of Defense 1960 – first networked nodes linked 1969 - First node to node transmission from UCLA to Stanford - also first crash (“logon”) 1970 – first East coast node 1971 - 15 nodes on Internet
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History of the Internet/WWW 1972 – Ray Tomlinson and “@” 1973 – First international node (England and Norway) 1974 Transmission Control Protocol developed 1982 - ARPA establishes the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol (IP) 1983/4 - Domain name system introduced, number of Internet hosts 1000. (Internet is “born.”) 1972 – Ray Tomlinson and “@” 1973 – First international node (England and Norway) 1974 Transmission Control Protocol developed 1982 - ARPA establishes the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol (IP) 1983/4 - Domain name system introduced, number of Internet hosts 1000. (Internet is “born.”)
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History of the Internet/WWW 1985 - The WELL, first major online community was opened 1987 - number of hosts = 10,000 1988 – Morris worm cripples confidence 1989 - First commercial electronic mail through Internet (MCI and Compuserve) number of hosts = 100,000; AOL emerges 1985 - The WELL, first major online community was opened 1987 - number of hosts = 10,000 1988 – Morris worm cripples confidence 1989 - First commercial electronic mail through Internet (MCI and Compuserve) number of hosts = 100,000; AOL emerges
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History of the Internet/WWW 1991 - World-Wide Web (WWW) released by CERN; Tim Berners-Lee 1992 - number of hosts exceeds 1,000,000 1993 - Mosaic browser is introduced, becomes Netscape in 1994, Bill Gates’ “prophetic wisdom” August 1995 - Netscape IPO price $28, opening price $71; Amazon, eBay, and hotmail emerge, IE released 1991 - World-Wide Web (WWW) released by CERN; Tim Berners-Lee 1992 - number of hosts exceeds 1,000,000 1993 - Mosaic browser is introduced, becomes Netscape in 1994, Bill Gates’ “prophetic wisdom” August 1995 - Netscape IPO price $28, opening price $71; Amazon, eBay, and hotmail emerge, IE released
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History of the Internet/WWW 1997 - Bill Gates famous "Internet Tidal Wave" speech 1998 - DOJ files antitrust suit against Microsoft (U.S. vs. Microsoft); Google begins betatesting, ICANN formed 1999 - AOL purchases Netscape; Napster begins 2001 - AOL purchases Time Warner, Apple releases iPod 1997 - Bill Gates famous "Internet Tidal Wave" speech 1998 - DOJ files antitrust suit against Microsoft (U.S. vs. Microsoft); Google begins betatesting, ICANN formed 1999 - AOL purchases Netscape; Napster begins 2001 - AOL purchases Time Warner, Apple releases iPod
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History of the Internet/WWW 2004 – Facebook begins at Harvard University 2005 – YouTube launches from a garage 2006 – World Internet nodes pass 1 billion 2007 – Apple unveils iPhone 2008 – World Internet nodes pass 1.5 billion 2008 – Christian Science Monitor move 2009 – Seattle Post-Intelligencer moves online only 2004 – Facebook begins at Harvard University 2005 – YouTube launches from a garage 2006 – World Internet nodes pass 1 billion 2007 – Apple unveils iPhone 2008 – World Internet nodes pass 1.5 billion 2008 – Christian Science Monitor move 2009 – Seattle Post-Intelligencer moves online only
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Diffusion
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Stats As of December 2011 over 239 million American adults use the Internet 77% of the adult population Colorado: 79.9% 68% use it weekly: 70% male, 65% female 95/70 split $75k line 66% broadband penetration) North America accounts for 12% of global users. Global penetration: 32%. As of December 2011 over 239 million American adults use the Internet 77% of the adult population Colorado: 79.9% 68% use it weekly: 70% male, 65% female 95/70 split $75k line 66% broadband penetration) North America accounts for 12% of global users. Global penetration: 32%.
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What is the Internet/WWW? Internet - computers hosting the TCP/IP protocol World-Wide Web - A visual protocol combining hyperlinking with the TCP/IP protocol http HTML URL Internet - computers hosting the TCP/IP protocol World-Wide Web - A visual protocol combining hyperlinking with the TCP/IP protocol http HTML URL
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Breaking Down URLs 1.Protocol http, ftp, telnet, news, mailto 2.Name or Address of server.com,.edu,.org,.gov,.mil,.biz,.tv IP addresses 3.File navigation 1.Protocol http, ftp, telnet, news, mailto 2.Name or Address of server.com,.edu,.org,.gov,.mil,.biz,.tv IP addresses 3.File navigation
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WWW supported file types Hypertext Markup Language.html Joint Photographic Interchange Format.jpg Graphics Interchange Format.gif Portable Document Format.pdf Rich Text Format.rtf ASCII text.txt Real Audio files.ram,.rm Shockwave/Flash.swf,.flv Quicktime.mov Moving Pictures Experts Group.mpg,.mpeg,.mp3,.mp4 Hypertext Markup Language.html Joint Photographic Interchange Format.jpg Graphics Interchange Format.gif Portable Document Format.pdf Rich Text Format.rtf ASCII text.txt Real Audio files.ram,.rm Shockwave/Flash.swf,.flv Quicktime.mov Moving Pictures Experts Group.mpg,.mpeg,.mp3,.mp4
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The most critical design issue. Greater bandwidth allows flow of more digital data. Slowdowns and bottlenecks: periods of high usage and for home users. Wireless-fidelity (wifi) networks. Service providers implementing faster, more secure networks. The most critical design issue. Greater bandwidth allows flow of more digital data. Slowdowns and bottlenecks: periods of high usage and for home users. Wireless-fidelity (wifi) networks. Service providers implementing faster, more secure networks. Bandwidth
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HTML Standards World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)—develops and maintains standards W3C adds, deletes or modifies HTML commands—called “tags” XHTML—the future of HTML World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)—develops and maintains standards W3C adds, deletes or modifies HTML commands—called “tags” XHTML—the future of HTML
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How WWW publishing works
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