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Internet / Internet ResearchWhat is the Internet?What is an ISP?What is a hyperlink?What is an URL?What is a plug-in?How does the Internet work?TCP/IPDomainDNSServer, Web Server, HostBrowserSlide 13Search EnginesSubject DirectoriesSpecializes Databases -“Invisible Web”Recommended Search Strategy: Analyze your topic & Search with peripheral visionEvaluating Web Pages: Techniques to Apply & Questions to AskStyle Sheets for Citing Internet ResourcesInternet Research AssignmentQuiz 1Internet / Internet ResearchACR/TSM 251Luke E. ReeseSeptember 16, 2010What is the Internet?What is an ISP?What is a hyperlink?What is an URL?What is a plug-in?How does the Internet work?TCP/IP(Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) -- This is the suite of protocols that defines the Internet. Originally designed for the UNIX operating system, TCP/IP software is now available for every major kind of computer operating system. To be truly on the Internet, your computer must have TCP/IP software. IP Address or IP Number (Internet Protocol number or address). A unique number consisting of 4 parts separated by dots, e.g. 165.113.245.2 Every machine that is on the Internet has a unique IP address. If a machine does not have an IP number, it is not really on the Internet. Most machines also have one or more Domain Names that are easier for people to remember. IP numbers can be static or dynamically issued.DomainHierarchical scheme for indicating logical and sometimes geographical venue of a web-page from the network. In the US, common domains are .edu (education), .gov (government agency), .net (network related), .com (commercial), .org (nonprofit and research organizations). Outside the US, domains indicate country: ca (Canada), uk (United Kingdom), au (Australia), jp (Japan), fr (France), etc. Neither of these lists is exhaustive.DNS "Domain Name Server entry" frequently appears a browser error message when you try to enter a URL. It refers to the initial part of a URL, down to the first /, where the domain and name of the host or SERVER computer are listed (most often in reversed order, name first, then domain). This is translated in huge tables standardized across the Internet into a numeric IP address unique to the host computer sought. These tables are maintained on computers called "Domain Name Servers." Whenever you ask the browser to find a URL, the browser must consult the table on the domain name server that particular computer is networked to consult. If this lookup fails for any reason, the "lacks DNS entry" error occurs. The most common remedy is simply to try the URL again, when the domain name server is less busy, and it will find the entry (the corresponding numeric IP address).Server, Web Server, HostA computer running that software, assigned an IP address, and connected to the Internet so that it can provide documents via the World Wide Web. Also called HOST computer. Web servers are the closest equivalent to what in the print world is called the "publisher" of a print document. An important difference is that most print publishers carefully edit the content and quality of their publications in an effort to market them and future publications. This convention is not required in the Web world, where anyone can be a publisher; careful evaluation of Web pages is therefore mandatory.BrowserBrowsers are software programs that enable you to view WWW documents. They "translate" HTML-encoded files into the text, images, sounds, and other features you see. Microsoft Internet Explorer (called simply IE), Firefox, Mosaic, Chrome, Macweb, and Netcruiser are examples of browsers that enable you to view text and images and many other WWW features. They are software that must be installed on your computer.How does the Internet work?Search EnginesHow do they work?Subject DirectoriesHow do they work?Specializes Databases -“Invisible Web”How do they work?Recommended Search Strategy: Analyze your topic & Search with peripheral visionReadingEvaluating Web Pages: Techniques to Apply & Questions to AskReadingStyle Sheets for Citing Internet ResourcesAuthorDate of publicationTitleDate of accessComplete URLExampleUC Berkeley Library. (2010) Glossary of Internet and web jargon. Retrieved September 16, 2010 from http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Glossary.html.Internet Research AssignmentQuiz 1Available on Angel – due by


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MSU TSM 251 - Internet / Internet Research

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