INTERNET TUTORIAL by kaoser 01912648258 |
INTRODUCTION
What is the Internet? || What is the Web? || How to Connect
Surfing for the First Time || Troubleshooting || Other Features
Links || Glossary || The 'Net Around the World
INTERNET QUIZ
What is the Internet? || What is the Web? || How to Connect
Surfing for the First Time || Troubleshooting || Other Features
Links || Glossary || The 'Net Around the World
INTERNET QUIZ
What Is the Internet?
The Internet, sometimes called simply "the Net," is a worldwide system of computer networks - a network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other computers).
What is Email?
Electronic mail is known E mail is For many Internet users, electronic mail (e-mail) has practically replaced the Postal Service for short written transactions. Electronic mail is the most widely used application on the Net. You can also carry on live "conversations" with other computer users, using Internet Relay Chat (IRC). More recently, Internet telephony hardware and software allows real-time voice conversations.
Email, also sometimes written as e-mail, is simply the shortened form of electronic mail, a protocol for receiving, sending, and storing electronic messages. Email has gained popularity with the spread of the Internet. In many cases, email has become the preferred method of communication.
What is Gmail
The most widely used part of the Internet is the World Wide Web (often abbreviated "WWW" or called "the Web").
The importance of e-mail and e-mail rules.
Yes believe it or not some companies and small businesses are basically forced to use free email services because they are normally on “pay as you go†internet. So what is the importance of e-mail and e-mail rules when it comes to receiving and sending e-mail?
Well for most new or young businesses that are trying to set-up a supply-chain cannot reach the supplier because the e-mail rules will automatically block any “free†e-mail account regardless if it is spam or a real future customer.
Lately I find this to be the norm. Students cannot reach or contact colleges because there mails are blocked and then they have to make costly phone-calls and basically get no-ware fast! So is it to protect people from spam or is it lazy IT work?
Well being from an IT background it is just damn lazy to block any and all e-mails coming from “free†mail servers. Basically you as a business ARE losing money because a lot of customers cannot reach you and will not phone you “thanks heavy phone bills†and more importantly if your IT staff is just blocking “free†accounts it is time for some retraining. Mail rules is not brain surgery! Hell you can just Google it and set it up! Even a simple screening process can make your e-mail system more effective.
In the end your business is about making money, and if people or the public has difficulty in contacting YOU! Then you can be sure they wrote you off as a possible “supplier or service provider†thus YOU lose money! Think about it...
Also if I can give a single tip for ALL business and companies. Specify if you do business with the public or only with other business this will allow for clarity. Also if applicable include an accessible pricelist! This will make inquiries easier for the client in question.
It is simple things like e-mail rules and badly designed information pages on the internet that IS costing your company money. Fact is you have a internet webpage to make your products and services more accessible to the public put if it is short on information and the person cannot get in contact it is game-over. YOU lose money both on your webpage and you are losing customers at the same time.
In this section...
- How Does the Internet Work?
- The History of the Internet
- What Kinds of Information are Available?
- How Do People Use the Internet?
- The Sum of Many Parts
- It seems like everyone's talking about the Internet these days. But what is it really? How does it work? How do you access it? And most important, what can it do for you at work or at home? Fortunately, accessing and using the Internet is fairly simple. Let this tutorial be your guide to the Internet as you connect for the first time and explore the network's vast and useful resources.
How Does the Internet Work?
- The Internet is a worldwide collection of computer networks, cooperating with each other to exchange data using a common software standard. Through telephone wires and satellite links, Internet users can share information in a variety of forms. The size, scope and design of the Internet allows users to:
- connect easily through ordinary personal computers and local phone numbers;
- exchange electronic mail (E-mail) with friends and colleagues with accounts on the Internet;
- post information for others to access, and update it frequently;
- access multimedia information that includes sound, photographic images and even video; and
- access diverse perspectives from around the world.
The History of the Internet
- Many people think that the Internet is a recent innovation, when in fact the essence of it has been around for over a quarter century. The Internet began as ARPAnet, a U.S. Department of Defense project to create a nationwide computer network that would continue to function even if a large portion of it were destroyed in a nuclear war or natural disaster. During the next two decades, the network that evolved was used primarily by academic institutions, scientists and the government for research and communications. The appeal of the Internet to these bodies was obvious, as it allowed disparate institutions to connect to each others' computing systems and databases, as well as share data via E-mail. The nature of the Internet changed abruptly in 1992, when the U.S. government began pulling out of network management, and commercial entities offered Internet access to the general public for the first time. This change in focus marked the beginning of the Internet's astonishing expansion. According to a survey conducted by CommerceNet and Nielsen Media Research in early 1997, nearly one out of every four Americans over the age of 16 is an Internet user. And the number of users worldwide is believed to be well into the tens of millions. Other statistics are equally startling:
- A CNN report stated that Internet traffic in 1996 was 25 times what it was just two years earlier.
- The market research group IntelliQuest pegged the number of Internet users in the U.S. in late 1996 at 47 million - a 34 percent increase over the first quarter of that year.
- According to IBM, 146 countries currently have at least some level of Internet access.
- The technology research firm IDG estimates that by century's end, one billion people worldwide will have access to personal computers—more than doubling the computer-savvy population of 1996.
What Kinds of Information are Available?
- In addition to text documents, the Internet makes available graphics files (digitized photographs and artwork), and even files that contain digitized sound and video. Through the Internet, you can download software, participate in interactive forums where users post and respond to public messages, and even join "chats," in which you and other users type (and, in some cases, speak) messages that are received by the chat participants instantly.
How Do People Use the Internet?
- Obviously, the Internet can bring you a whole host of capabilities. But how can they be put to practical use? Among the ways that users like yourself are taking advantage of the Internet are:
- Sharing research and business data among colleagues and like-minded individuals.
- Communicating with others and transmitting files via E-mail.
- Requesting and providing assistance with problems and questions.
- Marketing and publicizing products and services.
- Gathering valuable feedback and suggestions from customers and business partners.
The Sum of Many Parts
- Unlike many computer networks, the Internet consists of not one but multiple data systems that were developed independently. The most popular and important systems are:
- E-mail, for exchange of electronic mail messages.
- USENET newsgroups, for posting and responding to public "bulletin board" messages.
- File Transfer Protocol (FTP), a system for storing and retrieving data files on large computer systems.
- Gopher, a method of searching for various text-based Internet resources (largely obsolete).
- TELNET, a way of connecting directly to computer systems on the Internet.
- Internet Relay Chat (IRC), a system for sending public and private messages to other users in "real time"—that is, your message appears on the recipient's screen as soon as you type it.
- CU-SeeMe, a videoconferencing system that allows users to send and receive sound and pictures simultaneously over the Internet.
- The World Wide Web.
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