1 / 32

The University of Akron Summit College Business Technology Dept.

The University of Akron Summit College Business Technology Dept. 2440: 141 Web Site Administration Introduction the Internet and the Web Instructor: Enoch E. Damson. Computer Network. Two or more computers connected together to share resources like printers and programs

etoile
Download Presentation

The University of Akron Summit College Business Technology Dept.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The University of AkronSummit CollegeBusiness Technology Dept. 2440: 141Web Site Administration Introduction the Internet and the Web Instructor: Enoch E. Damson

  2. Computer Network • Two or more computers connected together to share resources like printers and programs • Fall into two categories: • Local Area Network (LAN) – computers connected within a small geographic area like a building • Wide Area Network (WAN) – a connection of computers over a few miles or thousands of miles • E.g. the Internet Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  3. The Internet • A large collection of computers all over the world that are connected to one another • A large network of networks • Also called the “Net” Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  4. Intranet • LAN or WAN that uses TCP/IP within a firm • Uses the same concepts and technologies on the Internet to share part of an organization’s information or operation with its employees Introduction to the Web

  5. Origins of the Internet No one person invented the Internet However, certain people contributed major breakthroughs Leonard Kleinrock (Massachusetts Institute of Technology): published a paper in 1961 on packet switching which was essential to the Internet Packet switching: packets of data can be sent from one place to another based on address information carried in the data J.C.R. Licklider: the first to describe an internet-like worldwide network of computers, in 1962 as the “Galactic Network" Larry G. Roberts: created the first functioning long-distance computer networks in 1965 He designed the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET), under the auspices of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, as a means to share information on defense research 5 Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  6. Origins of the Internet… Vinton (Vint) Cerf and Robert (Bob) Kahn: invented the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the Internet Protocol (IP) in 1972 and 1973 Most credited for being the “Fathers of the Internet” TCP/IP - moves data on the modern Internet Transmission control protocol (TCP) includes rules that networked computers use to establish and break connections Internet protocol (IP) includes rules for routing individual data packets (small chunks of data) 6 Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  7. Origins of the Internet… • The US Department of Defense (DoD) created a research agency known as: • Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) – later known as Defence ARPA (DARPA), created a network called: • Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) – an experimental WAN primarily for academic research, scientific, and military purposes • Made up of about four main computers located at: • University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) • University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) • University of Utah • Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  8. Origins of the Internet… • Some of the other well known interconnecting networks that joined into the Internet are: • Military Network (MILNET) – split from ARPANET as a specialized network reserved for high-security military usage • Computer Science Network (CSNET) – funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) for educational and research institutions with no access to the ARPANET • National Science Foundation Network (NSFnet) – developed as an addition to CSNET • Because It’s Time Network (BITNET) – developed by City University of New York to link IBM mainframes at universities • Joint Academic Network (Janet) – developed in the United Kingdom to link universities Introduction to the Web

  9. Commemorative Plague on the Birth of the Internet Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  10. Internet Connectivity • Major changes to Internet began in the 1990s when new Internet backbone was created with the four network access points (NAPs), and more of them later • Backbone – a high-speed network that connects to other networks • Peering agreementsbetween network owners and Internet service providers (ISPs) were created to exchange network traffic Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  11. Internet Connectivity… • Internet service providers (ISPs) provide the software needed to connect to the Internet, browse the Web, send and receive e-mails messages, and transfer files. They sell Internet access to users • A modulator-demodulator (modem) is device that enables an Internet connections by converting signals between a computer and the transmission line • Common connections that allow data to travel between computers and the Internet include: • T1 and T3 line connections • Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) • Cable Introduction to the Web

  12. Internet Resources • Resources used on the Internet include: • World Wide Web (WWW) • Electronic Mail (E-mail) • Commercial Services • Newsgroups • Web blogs • Social Networking • Games Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  13. World Wide Web (the Web) • Origins started at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN) in Geneva, Switzerland • By Tim Berners-Lee in 1990/91 • Also called the “Web” • After the initial surge of interest on the Web, a need arose for a standards organization to set recommended practices for the Web • The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was founded to meet the growing need on the Web Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  14. World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) • The W3C (http://www.w3.org) was founded in 1994 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) • Led by Tim Berners-Lee • The W3C sets standards for the Web and provides an open, nonproprietary forum for industry and academic representatives to add to the evolution of the Web • Various committees that make up the W3C look to expand and set standards for many new Web technologies Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  15. Web Terminologies • Link (hyperlink or hypertextlink) – text, graphic, or other Web elements that connects to additional data on the Web • Web Page – a document on the Web • Uniform Resource Locator (URL) - a unique address used to identify documents on the Web • Web Browser – software for displaying Web pages • E.g. Mosaic, Navigator, Internet Explorer, Opera • Web server – makes Web pages available on the Web • Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) – the default protocol (program) used on the Web to help transfer files • Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) – the language used to define the structure and content of Web pages Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  16. Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) • HTML is a markup language – a structured language to identify common sections of a document such as headings, paragraphs, and lists • Tim Berners-Lee formally created HTML in 1992 at the CERN labs (in Switzerland) originally for simple document structure • Berners-Lee adopted only elements of SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language) for representing basic office documents such as memos and reports • SGML – an international standard for representing text in an electronic form for exchanging documents independently • The first draft included elements such as titles, headings, paragraphs, and lists Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  17. Properties of HTML • Web browsers interpret HTML markup elements and display the results • HTML adopts many features of SGML including: • Cross-platform compatibility • Markup elements such as headings, lists, paragraphs, etc • HTML is an open, nonproprietary language Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  18. Structure of HTML • HTML uses a combination of tags, attributes, and values to generate results • E.g. <body bgcolor=“red”> • body – is the element in a tag • bgcolor – is the attribute of the <body> tag • red – is the value of the attribute in optional single/double quotes Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  19. HTML Page Format <html> <head> </head> <body> </body> </html> Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  20. eXtensible Markup Language (XML) • A set of guidelines for delimiting text through a system of tags • Follows rigid guidelines • Allows information to be defined with tags Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  21. eXtensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML) • Combines the rules and syntax guidelines of XML with HTML Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  22. XHTML Page Format • XHTML pages follow a basic structure as follows Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  23. XHTML Page Format… • Below are the explanations to the XHTML page structure • XML declaration – identifies document as XHTML document • Document Type Definition (DTD) – URL points to a file that outlines the available elements, attributes, and usage and the three XHTML DTDs available are: • XHTML Transitional – helps to maintain backward compatibility with older browsers and access to HTML 4.01 elements • XHTML Strict – does not provide any HTML elements for page appearance • XHTML Frameset – gives access to HTML elements for framesets • XHTML Names – URL points to a files that gives detailed information about the particular XML vocabulary (XHTML) Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  24. HTML vs. XHTML • Some major differences between HTML and XHTML include the following: • All element attributes names are in lowercases • E.g. <p> instead of <P> • All attribute values must be contained within single or double quotes • E.g. <body bgcolor=“#ffffff”> instead of <body bgcolor=#ffffff> • All nonempty elements must have a closing tag • E.g. <p>XHTML</p> instead of <p>HTML • All empty tags should be written with a space and a / symbol at the end of the tag • E.g. <br /> instead of <br> Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  25. HTML & XHTML Developments • HTML versions 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 3.2, 4.01 released from 1989 through 1999 • XHTML versions 1.0, 1.1 released in 2001, 2002 respectively • XHTML version 2.0 was discontinued • HTML 5.0 and XHTML 5.0 in development • HTML 5.0 – by Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG) led by Ian Hickson (from Google, formerly of Opera Software) • XHTML 5.0 – by an HTML Working Group Introduction to the Web

  26. Versions of HTML & XHTML Introduction to the Web

  27. HTML5 Page Format • XHTML pages follow a basic structure as follows Introduction to the Web

  28. Dynamic HTML (DHTML) • A collection of different technologies including: • HTML/XHTML • CSS • JavaScript Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  29. Style Sheets • Style sheets separate display properties from the content • The separation of style and structure was accomplished in 1996 by the W3C’s specification for a Web style language named Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) • SGML and HTML were designed to represent document structure, not style • Style elements such as <fonts> were introduced by browser developers to help HTML authors bypass this HTML design limitation • Mixing style information within a document limits the cross-platform compatibility of Web contents Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  30. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) • Allows authors to create style rules for elements and express them externally in a style sheet document • Used mainly to separate presentation from the structure of a page • Presentation – “looks” of a page • Structure – “meaning” of a page’s content Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  31. JavaScript • Developed by Netscape • Has become almost as popular as HTML • Has nothing to do with the Java Programming Language • But Netscape licensed the name from Sun Microsystems in hopes of increasing acceptance of the new scripting protocol Introduction to the Internet & the Web

  32. Web Application • An application on Web sites that delivers dynamic data using: • DHTML • Database – stores data for future retrieval and update • Server-side scripting – such as like Active Server Pages (ASP), Java Server Pages (JSP), ASP.NET, ColdFusion, PHP, etc Introduction to the Internet & the Web

More Related