Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Elias M. Awad Third Edition ELECTRONIC COMMERCE From Vision to Fulfillment 3-1© 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ELC 200 Day 7.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Elias M. Awad Third Edition ELECTRONIC COMMERCE From Vision to Fulfillment 3-1© 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ELC 200 Day 7."— Presentation transcript:

1 Elias M. Awad Third Edition ELECTRONIC COMMERCE From Vision to Fulfillment 3-1© 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ELC 200 Day 7

2 1-2 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Agenda Questions?? Assignment 2 is Due Assignment 3 posted –Due Oct 2, 2008 @ 11:05 AM Quiz 1 Corrected –6 A’s, 1 B and 3 C’s Discussion on hosting your web Site

3 Elias M. Awad Third Edition ELECTRONIC COMMERCE From Vision to Fulfillment 3-3© 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Hosting Your Web Site

4 3-4 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc The focus of this chapter is on several learning objectives ISPs and the services they offer How to choose an ISP How to register a domain name Role of application service providers How to select an ASP to suit your needs

5 3-5 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc The problem So what do you need? –A way to create a web site –A place (Web server) to put your web site –A way to connect your web site to the WWW –A domain name for your web site –A way for you to connect to your Web Site to “load, update and maintain” your web site –A way for your customers to reach you (e-mail) –A way to accept orders –A way to make sure your web site stays “up” The question is what do you do yourself and what do you outsource to “someone else” and how do you pick the right “someone else”??

6 3-6 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Terms to Know Internet Service Provider (ISP) : company that connects customers with PCs and browsers to the Internet Virtual hosting : a company with its own domain name, hosted by an ISP to conduct business via the Internet Virtual domain : a company with its own domain name, hosted by an ISP to conduct business via the Internet –www.mydomain.com >> www.isp.com/mydomainwww.mydomain.comwww.isp.com/mydomain –http://Tonyg.umfk.maine.edu >> http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.eduhttp://Tonyg.umfk.maine.edu http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.edu –http://compsci.umfk.maine.edu/ >> http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.eduhttp://compsci.umfk.maine.edu/ http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.edu Domain name : a company’s identifier in cyberspace

7 3-7 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Why Use an ISP? Most client organizations are anxious to go on the Internet without questioning the reliability of the ISP that can accommodate their Web site There is more to deciding on an ISP than price: –Technology –Staffing –Speed –Amount of congestion Resources to host your own Web site: –Hardware - A Web server, communication gear, and a special router: $5,000 to $18,000 a year http://www.dell.com/content/products/category.aspx/servers?c=us &cs=04&l=en&s=bsd&~ck=anavmlhttp://www.dell.com/content/products/category.aspx/servers?c=us &cs=04&l=en&s=bsd&~ck=anavml http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps5853/index.html –Communications - Typically a T1 or fractional T1 line: $5,000 to $12,000 per year http://www.buyt1s.com/lpatt545/?gclid=CLj26prG844CFQwbgQodOSGwKw –Staff - At least a Webmaster, a Web designer, and a help desk: $45,000 to $80,000 per year –Total - $58,000 to $110,000 per year

8 3-8 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc The Infrastructure of an ISP Provider Your company Web site has to be stored on a Web server that is always connected to the Internet by a high-speed link An ISP should provide: –Standby electric power as backup to keep the site available in the event of a blackout. –Redundant fault-tolerant servers to ensure that your Web site will continue in the event of a hard drive or a server breaks down. –Redundant communications lines to keep your site active in the event a phone line or a router goes down –One or more firewalls to protect your Web site from hackers or unauthorized access.

9 3-9 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Web Site Infrastructure

10 3-10 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Types of Service Providers Internet service provider (ISP) : a specialized business that offers Internet access Applications service provider : offers packaged software for lease online Wireless application service provider (WASP) : a company that offers untethered applications; hosting, developing, and managing applications are similar to that of an ASP Business service provider (BSP) : and Internet service developer that rents only its own proprietary applications via the Web Whole service provider (WSP) : a service provider that packages a selection of BSP applications for distribution online

11 3-11 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Types of Web Hosting Services Web Hosting : providing, managing, and maintaining hardware, software, content integrity, security, and reliable high-speed Internet connections Four types of Web hosting services: –Dial-up access (not very common) –Developer’s hosting (very common in rural communities) –Web hosting only (from very cheap to very good) –Industrial-strength hosting (urban) http://www.top-10-web-hosting.com/?wcw=google

12 3-12 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc From you to the dial-up ISP TCP/IP protocol stack on PC separates message into packets Packets converted to analog format by modem Analog signal sent over ordinary telephone line Receiving modem coverts from analog back to digital ISP sends from its computer to a dedicated connection to some bigger ISP

13 3-13 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc The Backbone of the Internet Backbone: a cluster of competing companies called network service providers. Backbones a usually fiber optic trunk lines with extremely high bandwidths. Backbones connect major network nodes and allow smaller ISPs access to the internet One NSP (Sprint) backbone map of USAbackbone map of USA –Where you are connected to the backbone often determines your performance attributes

14 3-14 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Packets, Routers, and Routes on the Internet

15 3-15 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Internet Service Providers

16 3-16 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Internet Backbone from UUNET

17 3-17 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Selected Connection Types, Features and Speed (costs are estimates)

18 3-18 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ISP Structure and Services ISPs connect to NSPs Two types of ISPs –Facilities-based ISPs have significant start-up costs associated with hardware and software purchases and Internet access leases –Virtual ISPs do not have any of these costs –Marketing and sales to generate new customers Residential customers Commercial customers Public customers

19 3-19 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ISP Services An ISP provides a variety of service - the expectations of any customer are for main services to include: –Domain name server (DNS) : a repository where the domain name for each ISP is stored –E-mail : the most commonly used service on the Internet –Radius server : a network access server that authenticates a user’s ID and password and triggers accounting to complete the customer’s chargeable session

20 3-20 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ISP Optional Service

21 3-21 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Some bandwidth math Size of web suite is 5 MB ~= 40,000,000 bits or 40Mb If 120 users try to download the site every min –120*40Mb = 4800Mb/min = 800 Mb/sec You want the site to download in 10 secs or less –Each download must be 4Mb/ sec (40Mb/10 sec) –1st sec = 2 users (8Mbps) –2nd sec = 4 users (16Mbps) –3rd sec = 6 users (24Mbps) –10 th sec (and every second there after) = 20 users (80Mbps) If you want the site to load twice as fast (5 sec) you need twice the bandwidth (160 Mbps) If the size of the web site = 500KB then you need 8Mbps for 20 concurrent users (@ 10 secs) –0.8 Mbps for 2 concurrent users ( more than DSL or Cable Modem up speeds) Bandwidth required = (S * N) / (RS * 60) –S = Size of web site in bits (8 * bytes) –N = Number of users per min –RS = Required download speed in sec Best case ~ 1 user per min with 5 sec download of a 50KB site (500 words with a 45KB jpeg background) –(400Kb * 1) /(5*60) ~ 1.3 Kbps

22 3-22 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Technical Services A T1 line is a digital carrier line that transmits digital signals at 1.544 Mbps –$500-1000/month A T3 line transmit digital signals at 44,736 Mbps –$5000/month Fiber-optic-based Internet : –OC-3 155.52 Mbps $12,000/month + carrier –OC-12 622.08 Mbps $30,000/month + carrier –OC-768 40 Gbps Don’t ask! A broadband connection on the Internet means many times the speed of the old dial-up service via modems

23 3-23 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Technical Services (Cont’d) Four types of broadband available for home access are: –Cable modems –Digital subscriber line (DSL) –Fiber-optic networks –Wireless technology

24 3-24 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Factors In Choosing an ISP See Questions to Ask On page 144 & 145

25 3-25 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Major Consumer Problems with ISPs Paying with a Debit Card Technical support that turns out not to be free Dialing a number to connect to the ISP that is not a local call –Long distance charges Trouble canceling an account Identity theft and the problems that ensue –Phake phree ISP’sPhake phree ISP’s

26 3-26 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Checking out an ISP Find someone with experience who’s been using the ISP for at least three months and ask how good they find the service Find out the number of users the ISP has in your area and the number of modems in use at the ISP Find out the pipe (network connection) each ISP uses to the Internet What is the number of employees the ISP has and the range of service it offers?

27 3-27 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ISP Rating Sites http://reviews.cnet.com/web- hosting/?tag=leftColumnArea1.0 http://www.webhostingratings.com/http://reviews.cnet.com/web- hosting/?tag=leftColumnArea1.0 http://www.webhostingratings.com/ http://www.hostcompare.com/index.htm http://www.webhostinginspector.com/

28 3-28 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Trends Growing trend toward no-fee and cut-rate Internet services –Microsoft’s Hotmail –GMAIL from Google –NetZero Inc., has close to 2 million registered usersNetZero Inc The business of free ISPs is uncertain ISPs generate brand loyalty through portal services –MSN Speed is what everyone wants

29 3-29 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Services to Expect From ISP Register your domain name Capture and forward your e-mail Host your Web site Provide technical and managerial support Give on-the-road support

30 3-30 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Importance of a Domain Name A URL should be easy to remember and should represent what the company is all about –Make sure the domain name is officially in your name –Consider registering the following kinds of domain names: One or two close names Unique product domain name Ideal company domain name A URL has three major parts: –http:// - Internet protocol –www.virginia.edu - The domain namewww.virginia.edu –/schls.html - A subdirectory of the file

31 3-31 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Choosing a Domain Name List the possible domain names that fit your organization’s image, products, or services Ask friends, peers, employees, and others who use the Web Narrow the list to a few favorites You want to check for availability ( www.internic.net )www.internic.net If the name is not in active use, then proceed with domain name registration

32 3-32 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Legal Issues When Choosing Domain Names Determine if the proposed domain name infringes on trademarks Make sure the proposed domain name does not adversely affect any famous trademark Register as a federal trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Register the proposed domain name with InterNic or Network Solutions (NSI) Look for expanded top-level domain names and registries –.arts –.firm –.info –.nom –.per and.nom –.rec –.store –.web

33 3-33 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Registering Your Domain Name Two ways to register: –On your own –Through an ISP ISP charges about $50 for processing in addition to the registration fee Possible pitfalls: –Overcharging –Domain name status –Backup –Contractual language

34 3-34 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Three FAQs About Domain Names What is involved in registering a domain name in.com,.net, or.org? How long does a registration last? Can the registrar be changed after registering a domain name?

35 3-35 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Definitions of Application Service Provider (ASP) An organization that hosts software applications on its own servers within its own facilities An Internet service provider that also sells application software that runs behind the Web servers at the hosting service Companies that sell, support, and manage applications that are hosted on the Internet on behalf of remote end users An extension of the ISP business offering Web-based applications as well as Internet access

36 3-36 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Services Offered by ASP Owns and operates a software application Owns, operates, and maintains the servers that run the application Employs the staff to maintain the application Makes the application available to customers everywhere via the Internet, normally in a browser Bills either on a per-use basis or on a monthly/annual fee basis. In many cases, the ASP can provide the service for free or even pay the customer.

37 3-37 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Benefits of ASP Outsourcing to an ASP lets the firm concentrate on its core competencies ASPs can keep their technical environment up-to- date Employ highly skilled and talented staff An ASP can cut monthly costs of application ownership Internet bandwidth shifts to the ASP

38 3-38 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Service Level Agreement Service Level Agreement (SLA): a contract between the user and the ASP vendor stating the vendor’s commitments to ensure reliable delivery of information. –Limits of liability –Example: Service goes out for one day in a month? Refund 1/30 of monthly fee of service? Shaking hands is not enough. Successful outsourcing of any application will require accountability, performance, and remediation to be spelled out and agreed upon by all parties.

39 3-39 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Assignment 3 Due Oct 2 @ 11:05 AM assignment3.doc budgetTemplate.xls

40 3-40 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Chapter Summary Internet service providers (ISPs) are attractive to many companies for several reasons: –Specialized staff to manage Web sites –High-speed connectivity to main Internet hubs –Real physical security from power outages –The latest technology ISPs can belong to one of three categories: –Large wholesale access provider –Smaller Internet backbone provider –Local ISP

41 3-41 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Chapter Summary (Cont’d) Hosting a Web site involves three major items: hardware, communications network and qualified staff. There are four types of service providers: ISPs, ASPs, BSPs, and WSPs. The backbone of the Internet is the group of network service providers that work together to provide total interconnection.

42 3-42 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Chapter Summary (Cont’d) Shopping for a Web-hosting ISP involves: – align bandwidth –connection availability and performance –virtual hosting –number of e-mail addresses allowed per account –ISP stability and staying power –Free local access –Customer service and technical support –ISP reliability and cost of service

43 3-43 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Chapter Summary (Cont’d) For online marketing, an ISP should be capable of: –Registering your domain name –Capturing and forwarding e-mail –Hosting the Web site –Technical and managerial support –On-the-road support Your domain name is the “house” for your Web site, e-mail, and other e-commerce transactions Wireless application service provider (WASP) handles untethered applications

44 3-44 © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc Chapter Summary (Cont’d) ASPs are services provided through the Internet To consider becoming an ISP, it is important to: –consider the target market –services to provide –technical requirements –type of provider to be


Download ppt "Elias M. Awad Third Edition ELECTRONIC COMMERCE From Vision to Fulfillment 3-1© 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc ELC 200 Day 7."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google