Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Internet!!. Like with history, I don’t expect you to memorize everything I’m about to say. You’ll have a homework problem asking you to articulate.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Internet!!. Like with history, I don’t expect you to memorize everything I’m about to say. You’ll have a homework problem asking you to articulate."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Internet!!

2 Like with history, I don’t expect you to memorize everything I’m about to say. You’ll have a homework problem asking you to articulate some pieces of it.

3 The Internet is not the only network! Can connect a bunch of computers without connecting to the Internet, and those computers can communicate with each other SCU has a local network “Novell” An internet is a network of networks – The Internet is an internet You can be connected to more than one network at the same time!

4 The www is not the whole Internet! It’s a series of tubes! Email is not always web-based – Thunderbird, Outlook not web-based, use the Internet to send emails as data Your Netflix streaming through your Blu-Ray player is not the web, but it uses the Internet to send movies as data Xbox Live Ssh uses the Internet to send commands as data The web uses the Internet to send webpages as data

5 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_wide_web “The World Wide Web (abbreviated as WWW or W3, [2] commonly known as the web), is a system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a web browser, one can view web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia, and navigate between them via hyperlinks.” [2]systemhypertextInternetweb browserweb pagesmultimedianavigatehyperlinks

6 What is the Internet? Not magic  Mainly, a bunch of cables Mostly privately owned You pay your access ISP (Internet Service Provider) And they make arrangements with other (higher-tier) ISPs to use their cables to get your traffic where it’s going http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Tier_1_network

7

8 What is the Internet? Yes, even across the ocean! These are also privately owned; AT&T, etc http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Undersea_cable_layin g.gif http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Undersea_cable_layin g.gif The.com bubble of the late 1990s led to an excess of bandwidth Where no cable: Satellite (slow, expensive, unreliable)

9 http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/20 14/08/15/shark_attacks_threaten_google_s_u ndersea_internet_cables_video.html http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/20 14/08/15/shark_attacks_threaten_google_s_u ndersea_internet_cables_video.html http://mentalfloss.com/article/60150/10- facts-about-internets-undersea-cables http://mentalfloss.com/article/60150/10- facts-about-internets-undersea-cables

10 How do I connect to the Internet? Computer/device  access point (for wireless)  ISP connects you to “the Internet”  Routers send your traffic along different cables (that belong to ISPs your ISP is friends with)  The computer out there that you’re trying to connect to

11 What is this other computer I’m connecting to? Usually, a server (web (wikipedia), data (netflix streaming), email)

12 If Jane is in Sunnyvale, and Bob is in Germany And Jane sends Bob an email from her jsmith@scu.edu email address to Bob’s banderson@gmail.com email address jsmith@scu.edu banderson@gmail.com When Bob reads the email message, what can you say about the path the bits have taken to get to him?

13 Jane tweets something, and Bob sees it. What can you say about the path that tweet has travelled

14 How does the Internet know how to find everything?!?!? Addresses! Every device connected to the Internet has a unique address that looks something like 129.210.115.4 (Google “What is my IP?”) You’ll notice that it changes – usually you’re assigned a new IP (Internet Protocol) address every time you connect But not servers – The Internet needs to be able to find them, so they have static IPs IP address has meaning; different ISPs control different blocks of IP addresses – This is how routers know where to send your packet so it eventually reaches its destination – 500 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, CA, USA

15 What does http://www.scu.edu have to do with 129.210.115.4?http://www.scu.edu I wouldn’t want to have to type 129.210.115.4 every time I wanted to go to the SCU webpage! http://www.scu.edu is the human-readable name that maps to the static IP address of SCU’s web server (Something like 129.210.115.4) http://www.scu.edu So how does http://www.scu.edu get translated into 129.210.115.4?http://www.scu.edu You must register this correspondence with the Domain Name System servers Servers whose sole purpose is to translate URLs (uniform resource locator, aka web address) into IP addresses

16 Regional Internet Registires Managed by ICANN Each allocates blocks of IP addresses to local ISPs

17 Domain Name System (DNSs) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Root_name_server http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Root_name_server When you try to go somewhere on the www, the first thing is a DNS lookup to get the IP address – DNS Server not found error Then you can establish a connection with the web server at that IP address What if these servers go down?!?!?!

18 Anatomy of a URL There is a web server for http://www.scu.eduhttp://www.scu.edu That web server is responsible for getting you anywhere that ends in.scu.edu math.scu.edu/~linnell

19 What is sent and how? And what does this have to do with security? Once you find the computer you want to connect to, you negotiate a connection – Authentication Then the information to be sent is broken up into packets, each of which has information about where it came from, where it’s going, and who sent it. – Encryption, https

20


Download ppt "The Internet!!. Like with history, I don’t expect you to memorize everything I’m about to say. You’ll have a homework problem asking you to articulate."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google