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History of the Internet and Internet Basics AGED 4143 Electronic Communications in Agriculture.

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Presentation on theme: "History of the Internet and Internet Basics AGED 4143 Electronic Communications in Agriculture."— Presentation transcript:

1 History of the Internet and Internet Basics AGED 4143 Electronic Communications in Agriculture

2 History (1969) The U.S. DOD wanted a non- centralized network over phone lines that would survive power outages (ARPANet -- Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) –J.C.R. Licklider was the primary developer –He informally referred his idea as the “intergalactic network,” (later reduced to “internet”) –Defense research programs at UCLA and Stanford were the first two nodes

3 History (1972) NCSC developed telnet, allowing for remote log in (1973) FTP was introduced, allowing easy transfer of files among remote computers (1977-83) A standard method of packaging messages was developed (TCP/IP- Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet Protocol), and more supercomputers (nodes) were added

4 History (1983) MILNET split from ARPANET (1983) Desktop computers with UNIX operating systems appeared (1985) The NSF got involved by linking a major network (NSFNET) to the internet for use by academic researchers

5 History 1993 NSFNET Backbone

6 History (1989) The backbone network was upgraded with help from IBM to "T1" (1.5 million bits of data per second, or about 50 pages of text per second) 1990 ARPANET was dissolved 1993 NSFNET was upgraded to “T3” (1994) Internet use exploded due to the advent of the the University of Minnesota’s Gopher Server and CERN’s World Wide Web.

7 History

8 The Web was a project developed by CERN (Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire), a European organization energy research The Web was built with the use of hypertext in mind (term coined in 1968) (1979) Charles Goldfarb invented SGML, which led to HTML (Tim Berners-Lee)

9 History (1994) Netscape was founded; Web servers on the internet grew from 250 to 2500 in one year (1993-94) Web browsers Mosiac and Netscape Navigator were introduced (1995) Servers grew to 73,500 in one year (1998) 72.6 million Americans had internet access

10 History WYSIWYG, icon-driven programming is commonplace Real-time and interactive communication is prevalent, with the advent of CGI programming and video and audio streaming 64% of Americans 12 and older used the internet in 2001

11 History Projections: –2005: 300 million people will be connected

12 How the Web Works http://www.howstuffworks.com/web- server1.htm

13 How the Web Works http://www.howstuffworks.com/web- server1.htm The Web is only a part of the internet Some of the “servers” connected to the internet are “web servers” –Special software to handle http (hypertext transfer protocol)

14 How the Web Works Servers have their own domain name, which is a human conversion of an IP (internet protocol) address –E.g., www.howstuffworks.com = 209.116.69.66 The domain name is a part of the URL (uniform resource locator), which is the web address

15 How the Web Works Servers have their own domain name, which is a human conversion of an IP (internet protocol) address –E.g., www.howstuffworks.com = 209.116.69.66 The domain name is a part of the URL (uniform resource locator), which is the web address –Web browsers request documents from web servers using the URL

16 How the Web Works URLs contain the following elements –access method (usually hypertext transfer protocol -- http://) –location or domain name (www.uark.edu) –directories and HTML file (/depts/aeedhp/index.html) So, the address for the AEED home page is http://www.uark.edu/depts/aeedhp/index.html Organizations like InterNIC, working with the World Trade Organization, register domain names for $35 and up

17 How the Web Works Modems convert digital information to analog information that can travel over the physical lines that make up the internet These lines include phone lines (twisted pair and optical fiber), coaxial cable, satellite airwaves, then they convert incoming analog signals back to digital Digital conversion takes time and slows download speeds

18 How the Web Works Information requested by the browser on your lab computer from a Web server in India, for example, probably follows this route: Server in India – Regional network in Asia – backbone network – regional network in U.S. – U of A server – PC in computer lab All the files related to a Web site are stored in a directory on a web server (usually owned by an ISP/OSP or by a large company or organization)

19 How the Web Works Each web site is a collection of pages linked by hypertext that can be read with a web browser, like Netscape Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer The browser reads the HTML tags for the page requested and represents them on the monitor as graphics and text. When you “open” a web site, your computer downloads each individual file associated with each page to its RAM and displays the visual images on your monitor


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