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Internet Review Academic Talent Search. All About Networking DevicesDevices Packet TransferPacket Transfer HardwareHardware SoftwareSoftware Wiring/CablingWiring/Cabling.

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Presentation on theme: "Internet Review Academic Talent Search. All About Networking DevicesDevices Packet TransferPacket Transfer HardwareHardware SoftwareSoftware Wiring/CablingWiring/Cabling."— Presentation transcript:

1 Internet Review Academic Talent Search

2 All About Networking DevicesDevices Packet TransferPacket Transfer HardwareHardware SoftwareSoftware Wiring/CablingWiring/Cabling ProtocolsProtocols And much much more!And much much more!

3 What is a Network?

4 Lots and Lots of wire. To get information from one machine to another we must connect a wire between them. One machine talks while the other listens, and vice-versa. Lots and Lots of wire. To get information from one machine to another we must connect a wire between them. One machine talks while the other listens, and vice-versa.

5 Sharing the wire. Instead of running a wire from every machine to all the other machines we share a single wire amongst them. One machine talks while all the others listen. Instead of running a wire from every machine to all the other machines we share a single wire amongst them. One machine talks while all the others listen.

6 Taking turns. All machines agree to only use the wire for a short burst of information (a packet) and then let someone else have a chance. This agreement on how to pass information on the wire is called a protocol.

7 Collision. If two machines start to talk on the wire at the same time, no one can understand what they said. We call it a collision. If two machines start to talk on the wire at the same time, no one can understand what they said. We call it a collision.

8 Collision (cont.) Both machines can tell that they interrupted each other so they “back off” for a small amount of time and try again.

9 Too much information! Lets say we have ten machines sharing a wire and they can talk for 1/100th of a second for each packet. If everyone is talking then they can say something every 1/10th of a second. Not a problem.

10 Too much information (cont.) But what happens when you have 1000 machines on a wire? They can only talk every 10 seconds! Not good! But what happens when you have 1000 machines on a wire? They can only talk every 10 seconds! Not good!

11 Too much information! (cont) To keep down the amount of talking on a wire we separate wires with routers. The router listens to all the packets on one wire and passes on only the packets destined for someone on the other wire.

12 Routers Routers are used to connect two or more networks together to logically form a bigger network. Internet Cloud

13 How far away is it? When a packet of information goes from one network to another it “hops” through the router. We use hops to tell distance. http://www.monitis.com/traceroute/ A B C

14 What is in a packet? TCP/IP Protocol: DESTINATION IP ADDRESS DESTINATION IP ADDRESS ORIGINATING IP ADDRESS ORIGINATING IP ADDRESS HOP COUNT HOP COUNT SIZE SIZE CHECKSUM CHECKSUM DATA DATA

15 So what is the Internet?

16 A network of millions of networks with hundreds of millions of devices, maybe even billions. Nobody really knows!

17 IP Address. Each device on a network has a unique address to tell it apart from all the other machines. For the TCP/IP protocol the address is four numbers separated by periods (130.86.90.1). Even coke machines and coffee pots can have addresses! http://whatismyipaddress.com/

18 Domain Name Service The phonebook of TCP/IP. We like to use names instead of numbers. The DNS keeps a record of host names and numbers. DNSlookup.com and select Lookup or Reverse Lookup. URL: Let’s compare to your postal address. www.aol.com 152.163.202.70 Domain Name Server

19 How it works LOGICALLY We have looked at how things interconnect at a physical level. Wires, routers, packets. Once everything is connected physically we can setup networks into a logical space to make things easy to use. No matter where in the world a machine is connected, we can talk to it.

20 HOST or CLIENT Any machine connected to a network, from simple desktop machines to giant mainframes with thousands of users.

21 SERVER. A host that provides a network service. Services can be e-mail systems, document archives, web sites. A program runs on a server to allow CLIENTS to connect and make requests. You might create a web site on your computer but you transfer it to a server and people access it from the server!

22 So what is the World Wide Web?

23 A specific protocol allowing communication via text, images, video, audio, etc. The World Wide Web is NOT the Internet. Imagine the Internet is just infrastructure to allow all forms of transportation. The WWW is just a specific type of transportation, like the rail system. Text, images, sound, etc. are just hitching a ride on the trains on the railway.

24 What is a Web Site?

25 What is are Web Page?

26 What is a Homepage?


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