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The Internet. Chrissy. Joey. Adam. Kati. The Rockets. Lesson 1 The World Wide Web. Before the web was created the internet was just used for scientific reports and government documents 1989 Tim Berners-Lee created HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) No more reading text from beginning to end
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The Internet Chrissy Joey Adam Kati The Rockets
Lesson 1The World Wide Web • Before the web was created the internet was just used for scientific reports and government documents • 1989 Tim Berners-Lee created HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) • No more reading text from beginning to end • We can now click on links have videos and sound
Lesson 2What is a URL? • Uniform Resource Locator • We all have an address at our homes • A URL is the address to go to a certain website • The only problem…………………….
Lesson 3: How Information Travels on the Internet • When you connect to a Web there isn't a fixed connection between your computer and the Web site. • Instead, information is exchanged using the best possible path at that particular time. • Special computers called routers determine these paths, avoiding slow links and favoring fast ones.
Lesson 3: How Information Travels on the Internet Click below for Demonstration
Lesson 4:Breaking Messages Into Packets • A page on the Internet—whether it's full of words, images or both—doesn't come to you in one shipment. • It's translated into digital information, chopped into pieces called packets, and sent to you like a puzzle that needs to be reassembled. • Web pages are broken down this way because small pieces can travel faster and make the most efficient use of the Internet's resources. • Once all the packets are reassembled, the complete page appears on your computer screen. • Crowded Highway Video
Lesson 4:Breaking Messages Into Packets Click Below for Activity!
Lesson 5:In Bandwidth, Bigger Is Better Bandwidth is the amount of data that can pass through a particular connection in a set amount of time. The greater the bandwidth of the connection, the faster a Web page builds on your screen.
Lesson 6:How Connection Speeds Are Measured Today's connection speeds to the Internet are measured in Kbps (kilobits per second) and Mbps (megabits per second). 1,024 bps = 1 Kbps 1,048,576 bps = 1 Mbps That means a 56 Kbps connection under ideal conditions can transfer 57,344 bps (56 x 1,024 bps) from the Internet to your computer. In reality, most 56 Kbps connections transfer around 48,000 bps.
Lesson 7: Information on the Internet • Anyone can put information on the Internet • The information can be reliable and true, but it also can be poor and inconsistent. • Therefore, we must be careful when judging the quality and validity of the content.
Search Engines • Be careful with search engines • Search engines are not ranked by quality of the website. • The search engines rank responses based on the frequency of keywords appearing on the web page. • They can also rank based on the frequency a web page is visited • Most search engines have access to less than one percent of web content.
Lesson 8:Connecting Wirelessly • Wireless cards can be built in computers or plugged into one of the slots in the machines. • These wireless cards allows for Internet access from anywhere from 30 feet to 30 miles from the access point. • WiFi (or Wireless Fidelity) transmits wireless data through radio waves • WiFi will not only connect to the Internet, but also other wireless networks
How WiFi works: • A wireless adaptor translates data into a radio signal and transmits it using an antenna. • Router receives the signal and decodes it • The information is then sent to the Internet using a wired connection (Ethernet) (The process also goes backwards)