1 Networking More than just a social interaction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Computer Networks and the Internet CMPT 109 Montclair State University.
Advertisements

MODULE 11 DOCUMENTS ON WEB 11.1 The internet and the world wide web 11.2 Documents and the world wide web Systems Analysis And Design © Systems Analysis.
 Clicker registration is linked on the Calendar page  Regarding s  If not your UW address, be sure to include your name (or even your UW.
The Information School of the University of Washington Oct university of washington1 Networking INFO/CSE 100, Fall 2006 Fluency in Information.
The Internet Useful Definitions and Concepts About the Internet.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 3-1 PERTEMUAN 5.
Layer 7- Application Layer
Chapter 3_1 Making the Connection: The Basics of Networking.
Chapter 3 _2 Making the Connection: The Basics of Networking.
The Internet and the World Wide Web. Una DooneyThe Internet and WWWSlide 2 What is the Internet? A collection of networks (LANS and WANS) around the world.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Fluency with Information Technology Third Edition by Lawrence Snyder Chapter.
1 Networking A computer network is a collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources. The.
Lesson 19 Internet Basics.
Networks Chapter 3. 2 What Is The Internet? It's not a big truck. It's a series of tubes. Ted Stevens, former Alaskan Senator, 6/28/2006 Internet: global.
1 Announcements Assignment 2 due today Office hours have been posted on the class Web Page Reminder of the Day : This class will have unannounced quizzes.
 If not your UW address, be sure to include your name (or even your UW netID) in the message  Sign your s with your name (and preferably.
Lawrence Snyder University of Washington, Seattle © Lawrence Snyder 2004 Connected computers are better! How’s it done?
 But, in Final Jeopardy: US Cities “This city’s largest airport is named for a WWII hero, and its second largest airport is named for a famous WWII battle”
Chapter 3 The Basics of Networking
Syllabus outcomes Describes and applies problem-solving processes when creating solutions Designs, produces and evaluates appropriate solutions.
Connecting one computer to another computer creates a network.
Networking Computer network A collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources Usually,
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 3-1 Networked Computers Change Our Lives The Information Age has brought profound changes.
CS134 Web Design & Development Introduction to the Internet Mehmud Abliz.
2013Dr. Ali Rodan 1 Handout 1 Fundamentals of the Internet.
Chapter 3 Fluency with Information Technology 4th edition
Web Mastering Module Internet Fundamentals. What is the Internet? –Global network of networks –Communicating using same set of rules (protocols/languages)
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public ITE PC v4.0 Chapter 1 1 Network Services Networking for Home and Small Businesses – Chapter.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 3-1 CHAPTER 3 Created by, David Zolzer, Northwestern State University—Louisiana The Internet and World Wide.
Networks QUME 185 Introduction to Computer Applications.
Tom Rebold, MPC FLUENCY WITH INFORMATION TECNOLOGY Skills, Concepts, and Capabilities.
15-1 Networking Computer network A collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources.
An Overview of the Internet: The Internet: Then and Now How the Internet Works Major Features of the Internet.
How Does the Internet Work? Protocols Protocols are rules that describe how computers communicate and exchange data. The Internet has a series of these.
The Internet The internet is simply a worldwide computer network that uses standardised communication protocols to transmit and exchange data.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 3-1.
Introduction to Internet. Chapter 1 Objectives Origins of the Internet Packets and Routers TCP/IP DNS HTTP URL Client-Server.
TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol)
Electronic Commerce and the Internet Chapter 6. Chapter Objectives Describe what the Internet is and how it works Explain packet-switching and TCP/IP.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public 1 Version 4.0 Connecting to the Network Introduction to Networking Concepts.
Networks. Local area network (LAN( Wide-area network (WAN( Networks Topology.
Test Your Tech A local area network is: A. An exclusive social club. B. A group of computers, usually in a single building, connected by cables. C. Local.
Created by, Ronald Mummaw, AVC FLUENCY WITH INFORMATION TECNOLOGY Skills, Concepts, and Capabilities.
Information Networks. Internet It is a global system of interconnected computer networks that link several billion devices worldwide. It is an international.
15-1 Networking Computer network A collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources Usually,
Internet and World Wide Web Introduction to the Internet.
Chapter Objectives In this chapter, you will learn:
Comparing Communication Types
CISC103 Web Development Basics: Web site:
Vocabulary Prototype: A preliminary sketch of an idea or model for something new. It’s the original drawing from which something real might be built or.
Introduction To Web Design
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
Professional Web Designing For Absolute Beginners
Vocabulary Prototype: A preliminary sketch of an idea or model for something new. It’s the original drawing from which something real might be built or.
Web Development & Design Chapter 1, Sections 4, 5 & 6
Wednesday, September 19, 2018 What Is the Internet?
Making the Connection: The Basics of Networking
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
ACT102 Introduction to web design
Networking INFO/CSE 100, Spring 2005 Fluency in Information Technology
Web Design & Development
CS134 Web Design & Development
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
ACT102 Introduction to web design
Networking INFO/CSE 100, Spring 2006 Fluency in Information Technology
Announcements Lecture on Thursday: CANCELLED!!
Chapter 3: The Basics of Networking
Announcements Survey Language barrier: My appologies
Lesson 19 Internet Basics.
The Internet and Electronic mail
Presentation transcript:

1 Networking More than just a social interaction

2 Networks... Computers are useful alone, but are better when connected (networked)  Access more information and software than is stored locally  Help users to communicate, exchange information … changing ideas about social interaction  Perform other services -- printing, Web,... UW’s networks move more than trillion bytes per day

3 Networking Changes Life The Internet is making fundamental changes … The FIT text gives 5 ways Nowhere is remote -- access to info is no longer bound to a place Connecting with others -- is great Revised human relationships -- too much time spent online could be bad English becoming a universal language Enhanced freedom of speech, assembly Can you think of others?

4 Network Structure Networks are structured differently based (mostly) on how far apart the computers are  Local area network (LAN) -- a small area such as a room or building  Wide area networks (WAN) -- large area, e.g. distance is more than 1 Km Internet: all of the wires, fibers, switches, routers etc. connecting named computers

5 Protocol Rules! To communicate computers need to know how to set-up the info to be sent and interpret the info received  Communication rules are a protocol  Example protocols EtherNet for physical connection in a LAN TCP/IP -- transmission control protocol / internet protocol -- for Internet HTTP -- hypertext transfer protocol -- for Web

6 LAN in the Lab EtherNet is a popular LAN protocol Recall, it’s a “party” protocol PC Ether Net Cable Typical MPC Lab Connection to campus network infrastructure

7 Campus & The World The campus subnetworks interconnect computers of the MPC domain which connects to Internet via a gateway All communication by TCP/IP Homer Dante Student CS MGH Gate way Switch mpc.edu

8 IP -- Like Using Postcards Information is sent across the Internet using IP -- Cerf uses postcard analogy Break message into fixed size units Form IP packets with destination address, sequence number and content Each makes its way separately to destination, possibly taking different routes Reassembled at destination forming msg Taking separate routes lets packets by-pass congestion and out-of-service switches addr # data

9 A Trip to Switzerland A packet sent from UW to ETH (Swiss Fed. Tech. University) took 21 hops UW Gateway

10 Check Internet Hops Interested?  Find software called Visual Routes (personal evaluation copies are free) at  Download a copy of the software  Install software and type in foreign URLs –Switzerland eth.ch –Australia –Japan kyoto-u.ac.jp –South Africa Use Google to find foreign computers

11 Naming Computers I People name computers by a domain name -- a hierarchical scheme that groups like computers.edu All educational computers.washington.edu All computers at UW dante.washington.edu A UW computer.ischool.washington.edu iSchool computers.cs.washington.edu CSE computers june.cs.washington.edu A CSE computer Peers Domains begin with a “dot” and get “larger” going right

12 Naming Computers II Computers are named by IP address, four numbers in the range cse.washington.edu: ischool.washington.edu:  Remembering IP addresses would be brutal for humans, so we use domains  Computers find the IP address for a domain name from the Domain Name System -- an IP address-book computer A computer needs to know IP address of DNS server!

13 Domains.edu.com.mil.gov.org.net domains are “top level domains” for the US  Recently, new TLD names added  Each country has a top level domain name:.ca (Canada),.es (Spain),.de (Germany),.au (Australia),.at (Austria),.us The FIT book contains the complete list

14 Logical vs Physical There are 2 ways to view the Internet Humans see a hierarchy of domains relating computers -- logical network Computers see groups of four number IP addresses -- physical network Both are ideal for the “users” needs The Domain Name System (DNS) relates the logical network to the physical network by translating domains to IP addresses

15 Client/Server Structure The Internet computers rely on the client/server protocol: servers provide services, clients use them Sample servers: server, web server,... UW servers: dante, courses, www, student,… Frequently, a “server” is actually many computers acting as one, e.g. dante is a group of more than 50 servers Protocol: Client packages a request, and sends it to a server; Server does the service and sends a reply

16 World Wide Web World Wide Web is the collection of servers (subset of Internet computers) & the information they give access to Clearly, WWW  Internet The “server” is the web site computer and the “client” is the surfer’s browser Many Web server’s domain names begin with www by tradition, but any name is OK Often multiple server names map to the same site: MoMA.org and

17 Client/Server Interaction For Web pages, the client requests a page, the server returns it: there’s no connection, just two transmissions Client ServerClient Server Client Server request reply Servers serve many clients; clients visit many servers

18 Dissecting a URL Web addresses are URLs, uniform resource locator, an IP address+path URLs are often redirected to other places; e.g. goes to protocol= Web server= www domain=.cs.washington.edu path= /education/courses/100/04wi/ directories (folders) file= index file extension=.htm hypertext markup language

19 Summary Networking is changing the world Internet: named computers using TCP/IP WWW: servers providing access to info  Principles Logical network of domain names Physical network of IP addresses Protocols rule: LAN, TCP/IP, http,... Domain Name System connects the two Client/Server, fleeting relationship on WWW

20 Class FTP server accounts Your FTP user accounts are mpc01a01 – mpc01a30. Use the same last two digits as your LOBOSMPC account. The password is abctmp. We will use WS_FTP95 LE to transfer files back and forth. We will learn how in class.

21 accessing your web site on-campus host name: me_goes_here ex:

22 accessing your web site off-campus host name: ame_goes_here ex: