Introduction of Internet
Introduction of Internet
Introduction
Today we live in a world of technology, where internet spins a web of interconnectivity around the globe. Through internet more than fifty million people in countries around the world have been connected. Internet was evolved in 1969, under the project named ARPANET(Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) to connect computers at different universities and U.S. defence. Soon after the people from different backgrounds such as engineers, scientists, students and researchers started using the network for exchanging information and messages.
In 1990s the internetworking of ARPANET, NSFnet and other private networks resulted into Internet. Therefore, Internet is a ‘global network of computer networks’. It comprises of millions of computing devices that carry and transfer volumes of information from one device to the other. Desktop computers, mainframes, GPS units, cell phones, car alarms, video game consoles, are connected to the Net.
World Wide Web
The World Wide Web was invented by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989, in 1995 the first connection was established over what is today known as the Internet.
By the end of 1990, the first Web page was served. In April 1993, the World Wide Web technology was available for anyone to use on a royalty-free basis.
Since that time, the Web has changed the world. It has perhaps become the most powerful communication medium the world has ever known.
A global Web of computers known as the Internet, allows individuals to communicate with each other often called the World Wide Web. The Internet provides a quick and easy exchange of information and is recognized as the central tool in this Information Age.
The World Wide Web (WWW) is an internet based service, which uses common set of rules known as Protocols, to distribute documents across the Internet in a standard way.
The World Wide Web, or ‘Web’ is a part of the Internet. The Web is viewed through web browser softwares such as Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox etc. Using browsers one can access the digital libraries containing innumerable articles, journals, e-books, news, tutorials stored in the form of web pages on computers around the world called Web Servers. Today thousands of web pages/websites are added to the WWW every hour.
- Yahoo
- AltaVista
- A computer virus
- A program that catalogs Web sites
- A hacker who breaks into computer systems
- An application for viewing web pages
- myspace
- Scripting language
- Browser
- Secure connection
- Authoring tool
- An icon
- A file manager
- A browser
- An Internet
- Uniform Resource Locator
- Web server
- File
- Web address
- Wide Web World
- Win World Web
- Web Wide World
- World Wide Web
- Node
- System
- Web clients
- Web customer
- Word Wide Web
- Web server
- Search engine
- website
- Line that delineates the edge of a programmer window
- Device used for modifying the window
- Software programme especially designed for viewing web pages on the Internet
- None of the above
- Communication
- Information Retrieval
- Presentation of Information
- All of the above
- Transport Control Protocol
- Transaction Control Protocol
- Transmission Control Protocol
- Transmission Control Point
- Local Area Network
- Internet
- Intranet
- Big Network
- Advance Recent Project Administration Network
- Advance Research Project Agency Network
- Advance Real Project Administration Network
- Advance Research Point Admin Network
- Uniform Resource Locator
- Unique Resource Locator
- Uniform Resource Location
- Under Resource Locator
- Internet Service Provider
- Intranet Service Provider
- Internet Social Public
- Internet Server Provider
- Server
- Remote Server
- Browser
- All of These
- File Transaction Protocol
- File Transfer Protocol
- File Task Protocol
- Fast Transfer Protocol
- Web browser
- Web server
- Web matrix
- Web network
- Bill Gates
- Lee. N. Feyong
- Tim Berners Lee
- Tom Berners Lee
- Web browser
- Protocol
- Web Server
- Search engines
- Internet architecture board
- Internet Society
- Internet Service Provider
- Different Computer
- MS Office
- Gmail
- Windows
- Microsoft Edge
- Google Meet
- Mozilla Firefox
- Google Chrome
- Microsoft
- ARPANET
- Web
- IBM
- Cookies are programs which run in the background of the web-client
- Cookies have the potential of being used to violate the privacy of users
- Cookies are very helpful in keeping track of users in developing online shopping cart, applications personalized portals and in advertising on websites
- Cookies cannot contain more than 4 Kb of data
- ANSI
- UTF-8
- UTF-8 BOM
- UTF-16
- Alt+H
- Shift+H
- CTRL+H
- None of the above
- HTML Text transfer Protocol
- Hypertext transfer Protocol
- High Transfer Tier Protocol
- HTML type Transfer Protocol
- Tim Thompson
- Tim Berners-Lee
- Charles Darwin
- Robert Chilliau
- Bill Gates
- Lee. N. Feyong
- Tim Berners Lee
- None of above
- Linux
- Windows
- Mozila
- Browser
- Search Engine
- Both Browser & Search Engine
- None of these
- Search Engines
- News groups
- Browsers
- None of the above
- Program that search documents
- A program that searches engines for specified keywords
- A machinery engine that search data
- A hardware component
- Mozilla
- Microsoft
- The World Wide Web Consortium
- NVDIA
- Encryption
- HTTP
- HTML
- Firewalls