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- 10BaseT
- 10 Megabit per second baseband Ethernet specification using two paris
of twisted-pair cabling (Category 3, 4 or 5): one pair for transmitting
data and the other for receiving data. 10BaseT has a distance limit
of approximately 100 meters per segment.
- 100BaseT
- 100 Mebabit per second baseband Fast Ehternet specification using
UTP wiring. Like the 10BaseT technology on which it is based, 100BaseT
sends link pulses over the network segment when no traffic is present.
However, these link pulses contain more information than those used
in 10BaseT.
- A Record
- An A record is part of the zone file. It is used to point Internet
traffic to an IP address. For example, you can use an "A record" to
designate abc.yourdomain.com to send traffic to your web site at IP
address 209.15.32.135. You can also designate xyz.yourdomain.com to
go to a separate IP address.
- Access [Microsoft®]
- MS Access® published by Microsoft is an easy to use and highly integrated
database creation and maintenance software. Capable of online databases,
the software is supported with the NT® hosting platform.
- ADSL
- (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) -- A method for moving data over
regular phone lines. An ADSL circuit is much faster than a regular phone
connection, and the wires coming into the subscriber's premises are
the same (copper) wires used for regular phone service. An ADSL circuit
must be configured to connect two specific locations, similar to a leased
line.
A commonly discussed configuration of ADSL would allow a subscriber
to receive data (download) at speeds of up to 1.544 Megabits per second,
and to send (upload) data at speeds of 128 kilobits per second. Thus
the 'Asymmetric' part of the acronym.
Another commonly discussed configuration would be symmetrical: 384
kilobits per second in both directions. In theory ADSL allows download
speeds of up to 9 megabits per second and upload speeds of up to 640
kilobits per second.
ADSL is often discussed as an alternative to ISDN, allowing
higher speeds in cases where the connection is always to the same
place.
- Anonymous FTP
- Anonymous File Transfer Protocol allows the public to log into an
FTP server with a common login (usually "ftp" or "anonymous" and any
password (usually the person's e-mail address is used as the password).
Anonymous FTP is benefitial for the distribution of large files to the
public, avoiding the need to assign large numbers of login and password
combinations for FTP access.
- Applet
- A small Java program that can be embedded in an HTML
page. Applets differ from full-fledged Java applications in that they
are not allowed to access certain resources on the local computer, such
as files and serial devices (modems, printers, etc.), and are prohibited
from communicating with most other computers across a network. The current
rule is that an applet can only make an Internet connection to the computer
from which the applet was sent.
- Archie
- A tool (software) for finding files stored on anonymous FTP
sites. You need to know the exact file name or a substring of it.
- ARPANet
- (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) -- The precursor to the
Internet. Landmark packet-switching network established in 1969
by the US Department of Defense as an experiment in wide-area-networking
that would survive a nuclear war.
- ASP
- ASP - Active Server Pages (ASP). ASP files, which provide Web developers
with an easier, faster, and more powerful way to build Web applications,
are regular HTML pages with embedded scripts. These scripts can be written
in any language and processed by the server when the file's URL is requested.
Source: http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/nts/exec/overview/changed.asp
- ATM
- ATM -- Asynchronous Transfer Mode. International sandard for cell
relay in which multiple service types (such as voice, video, or data)
are conveyed in fixed-length (53-byte) cells. Fixed-length cells allow
cell processing to occur in hardware, thereby reducing transit delays.
ATM is designed to take advantage of high-speed transmission media such
as E3, SONET, and T3.
- ASCII
- (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) -- This is the
de facto world-wide standard for the code numbers used by computers
to represent all the upper and lower-case Latin letters, numbers, punctuation,
etc. There are 128 standard ASCII codes each of which can be represented
by a 7 digit binary number: 0000000 through 1111111, plus parity.
- Backbone
- A high-speed line or series of connections that forms a major pathway
within a network. The term is relative, as a backbone in a small network
will likely be much smaller than many non-backbone lines in a large
network.
- Bandwidth
- The difference between the highest and lowest frequencies available
for network signals. The term is also used to describe the rated throughput
capacity of a given network medium or protocol. In short, bandwidth
is a loose term used to describe the throughput capacity (measured in
Kilobits or Megabits per second) of a specific circuit.
- Baud
- Unit of signaling speed equal to the number of discrete signal elements
transmited per second. Baud is synonymous with bits per second (bps).
In common usage the baud rate of a modem is how many bits
it can send or receive per second. Technically, baud is the number of
times per second that the carrier signal shifts value - for example
a 1200 bit-per-second modem actually runs at 300 baud, but it moves
4 bits per baud (4 x 300 = 1200 bits per second).
- BBS (Bulletin Board System)
- A computerized meeting and announcement system that allows people
to carry on discussions, upload and download files, and make announcements
without the people being connected to the computer at the same time.
There are many thousands (millions?) of BBS's around the world, most
are very small, running on a single IBM clone PC with 1 or 2 phone lines.
Some are very large and the line between a BBS and a system like CompuServe
gets crossed at some point, but it is not clearly drawn.
- Binhex
- (BINary HEXadecimal) -- A method for converting non-text files (non-ASCII)
into ASCII. This is needed because Internet e-mail can only handle
ASCII.
- Bit
- (Binary DigIT) -- A single digit number in base-2, in other words,
either a 1 or a zero. The smallest unit of computerized data. Bandwidth
is usually measured in bits-per-second.
- BITNET
- (Because It's Time NETwork (or Because It's There NETwork)) -- A network
of educational sites separate from the Internet, but e-mail is freely
exchanged between BITNET and the Internet. Listservs,
the most popular form of e-mail discussion groups, originated on BITNET.
BITNET machines are usually mainframes running the VMS operating system,
and the network is probably the only international network that is shrinking.
- Bps
- (Bits-Per-Second) -- A measurement of how fast data is moved from
one place to another. A 28.8 modem can move 28,800 bits per second.
- Browser
- Client software that is used to look at various kinds of Internet
resources. Examples include Microsoft's Internet Explorer and Netscape's
Navigator.
- BTW
- (By The Way) -- A shorthand appended to a comment written in an online
forum.
- Byte
- A set of Bits that represent a single character. Usually there are
8 Bits in a Byte, sometimes more, depending on how the measurement is
being made. See Also: Bit
- Certificate Authority
- An issuer of Security Certificates used in SSL connections.
- CGI
- (Common Gateway Interface) -- A set of rules that describe how a Web
Server communicates with another piece of software on the same
machine, and how the other piece of software (the 'CGI program') talks
to the web server. Any piece of software can be a CGI program if it
handles input and output according to the CGI standard.
Usually a CGI program is a small program that takes data from a
web server and does something with it, like putting the content of
a form into an e-mail message, or turning the data into a database
query.
CGI "scripts" are just scripts which use CGI. CGI is often confused
with Perl, which is a programming language, while CGI is an interface
to the server from a particular program. Perl is an application of
CGI, as well as MIVA, Python, PHP3, and other scripting languages.
- cgi-bin
- The most common name of a directory on a web server in which CGI
programs are stored. The 'bin' part of 'cgi-bin' is a shorthand version
of 'binary', because once upon a time, most programs were referred to
as 'binaries'. In real life, most programs found in cgi-bin directories
are text files -- scripts that are executed by binaries located elsewhere
on the server. While most programs using CGI are stored in this directory,
it is not a requirement for using CGI.
- Client
- A software program that is used to contact and obtain data from a
server software program on another computer, often across a great distance.
Each client program is designed to work with one or more specific kinds
of server programs, and each server requires a specific kind of client.
A web browser and an FTP program are specific kinds of clients.
See Also: Browser, Server
- Co-Location
- Network Operations Centers offer the ability for customers to place
their webservers and other network equipment in thier NOC which are
connected via high speed fiber data lines to the backbone of the Internet.
Administration is done remotely so that a customer far away can configure
and control their network equipment.
- Cold Fusion
- Cold Fusion is a scripting language for web designers that want wish
to do advanced development and/or database interfacing. Cold Fusion
supports MS Access, dBASE, FoxPro, and Paradox databases.
- Contact Record
- In the case of many registries, contact information for technical,
billing and administrative purposes are maintained in their database.
It is important to keep your contact records updated to ensure that
billing and renewal can proceed without problems.
- Cookie
- The most common meaning of 'Cookie' on the Internet refers to a piece
of information sent by a Web Server to a Web Browser that
the Browser software is expected to save and to send back to the Server
whenever the browser makes additional requests from the Server.
Depending on the type of Cookie used, and the Browser's settings,
the Browser may accept or not accept the Cookie, and may save the
Cookie for either a short time or a long time.
Cookies might contain information such as login or registration
information, online 'shopping cart' information, user preferences,
etc.
When a Server receives a request from a Browser that includes a
Cookie, the Server is able to use the information stored in the Cookie.
For example, the Server might customize what is sent back to the user,
or keep a log of particular user's requests.
Cookies are usually set to expire after a predetermined amount of
time and are usually saved in memory until the Browser software is
closed down, at which time they may be saved to disk if their 'expire
time' has not been reached.
Cookies do not read your hard drive and send your
life story to the CIA, but they can be used to gather more information
about a user than would be possible without them.
- Cyberpunk
- Cyberpunk was originally a cultural sub-genre of science fiction taking
place in a not-so-distant, dystopian, over-industrialized society. The
term grew out of the work of William Gibson and Bruce Sterling and has
evolved into a cultural label encompassing many different kinds of human,
machine, and punk attitudes. It includes clothing and lifestyle choices
as well.
- Cyberspace
- Term originated by author William Gibson in his novel Neuromancer
the word Cyberspace is currently used to describe the whole range of
information resources available through computer networks.
- DNS: Domain Naming System
- The DNS is a distributed, replicated that allows nameservers to map
easily remembered domain names to an IP number.
- Dedicated Server
- For those customers that want the advantages of colocation without
the hassles of purchasing their own server. See colocation.
- Digerati
- The digital version of literati, it is a reference to a vague cloud
of people seen to be knowledgeable, hip, or otherwise in-the-know in
regards to the digital revolution.
- Domain Name
- The unique name that identifies an Internet site. Domain Names always
have 2 or more parts, separated by dots. The part on the left is the
most specific, and the part on the right is the most general. A given
machine may have more than one Domain Name but a given Domain Name points
to only one machine. For example, the domain names: communitech.net,
ftp.communitech.net, whatever.communitech.net can all refer to the same
machine, but each domain name can refer to no more than one machine.
Usually, all of the machines on a given Network will have the same
thing as the right-hand portion of their Domain Names in the examples
above. It is also possible for a Domain Name to exist but not be connected
to an actual machine. This is often done so that a group or business
can have an Internet e-mail address without having to establish a
real Internet site. In these cases, some real Internet machine must
handle the mail on behalf of the listed Domain Name.
- E-Commerce
- Electronic Commerce. Refers to the general exchange of goods and services
via the Internet.
- E-mail
- (Electronic Mail) -- Messages, usually text, sent from one person
to another via computer. E-mail can also be sent automatically to a
large number of addresses (Mailing List).
- Ethernet
- A very common method of networking computers in a LAN. Ethernet
will handle about 10,000,000 bits-per-second and can be used with almost
any kind of computer.
- FAQ
- (Frequently Asked Questions) -- FAQs are documents that list and answer
the most common questions on a particular subject. There are hundreds
of FAQs on subjects as diverse as Pet Grooming and Cryptography. FAQs
are usually written by people who have tired of answering the same question
over and over.
- FDDI
- (Fiber Distributed Data Interface) -- A standard for transmitting
data on optical fiber cables at a rate of around 100,000,000 bits-per-second
(10 times as fast as Ethernet, about twice as fast as T-3).
See Also: Bandwidth , Ethernet
, T-1 , T-3
- Finger
- An Internet software tool for locating people on other Internet sites.
Finger is also sometimes used to give access to non-personal information,
but the most common use is to see if a person has an account at a particular
Internet site. Many sites do not allow incoming Finger requests, but
many do.
- Fire Wall
- A combination of hardware and software that separates a LAN
into two or more parts for security purposes.
- Flame
- Originally, flame meant to carry forth in a passionate manner in the
spirit of honorable debate. Flames most often involved the use of flowery
language and flaming well was an art form. More recently flame has come
to refer to any kind of derogatory comment no matter how witless or
crude.
- Flame War When an online discussion
degenerates into a series of personal attacks against the debaters,
rather than discussion of their positions. A heated exchange.
- FrontPage Microsoft® FrontPage® is
a site creation and management software tool. One of the most popular
website creation software packages the software, both FrontPage® 98
and FrontPage ®2000 is widely supported by the hosting community.
- FTP
- (File Transfer Protocol) -- A very common method of moving files between
two Internet sites. FTP is a special way to login to another
Internet site for the purposes of retrieving and/or sending files. There
are many Internet sites that have established publicly accessible repositories
of material that can be obtained using FTP, by logging in using the
account name anonymous, thus these sites are called anonymous ftp servers.
- Gateway
- The technical meaning is a hardware or software set-up that translates
between two dissimilar protocols, for example Prodigy has a gateway
that translates between its internal, proprietary e-mail format and
Internet e-mail format. Another, sloppier meaning of gateway is to describe
any mechanism for providing access to another system, e.g. AOL might
be called a gateway to the Internet.
- Gigabyte
- 1024 Megabytes
- Gopher
- A widely successful method of making menus of material available over
the Internet. Gopher is a Client and Server style program,
which requires that the user have a Gopher Client program. Although
Gopher spread rapidly across the globe in only a couple of years, it
has been largely supplanted by Hypertext, also known as WWW (World
Wide Web). There are still thousands of Gopher Servers on
the Internet and we can expect they will remain for a while.
- hit
- As used in reference to the World Wide Web, 'hit' means a single request
from a web browser for a single item from a web server;
thus in order for a web browser to display a page that contains 3 graphics,
4 'hits' would occur at the server: 1 for the HTML page, and
one for each of the 3 graphics.
'hits' are often used as a very rough measure of load on a server,
e.g. 'Our server has been getting 300,000 hits per month.' Because
each 'hit' can represent anything from a request for a tiny document
(or even a request for a missing document) all the way to a request
that requires some significant extra processing (such as a complex
search request), the actual load on a machine from 1 hit is almost
impossible to define.
- Home Page (or Homepage)
- Several meanings. Originally, the web page that your browser
is set to use when it starts up. The more common meaning refers to the
main web page for a business, organization, person or simply the main
page out of a collection of web pages, e.g. 'Check out so-and-so's new
Home Page.'
Another sloppier use of the term refers to practically any web page
as a 'homepage,' e.g. 'That web site has 65 homepages and none of
them are interesting.'
- Host
- Any computer on a network that is a repository for services
available to other computers on the network. It is quite common
to have one host machine provide several services, such as WWW
and USENET.
- Hosting
- This term can be used to refer to the housing of a web site, email
or a domain. See Email hosting and Web Site hosting for more details.
- HTML
- (HyperText Markup Language) -- The coding language used to create
Hypertext documents for use on the World Wide Web. HTML
looks a lot like old-fashioned typesetting code, where you surround
a block of text with codes that indicate how it should appear, additionally,
in HTML you can specify that a block of text, or a word, is linked to
another file on the Internet. HTML files are meant to be viewed using
a World Wide Web Client Program, such as Netscape or Mosaic.
- HTTP
- (HyperText Transport Protocol) -- The protocol for moving hypertext
files across the Internet. Requires a HTTP client program
on one end, and an HTTP server program on the other end. HTTP
is the most important protocol used in the World Wide Web (WWW).
- Hypertext
- Generally, any text that contains links to other documents - words
or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which
cause another document to be retrieved and displayed.
- IMHO
- (In My Humble Opinion) -- A shorthand appended to a comment written
in an online forum, IMHO indicates that the writer is aware that they
are expressing a debatable view, probably on a subject already under
discussion. One of may such shorthands in common use online, especially
in discussion forums.
- Index Server
- Index Server indexes the contents and properties of documents on an
Internet or intranet Web site served by IIS 4.0. Index Server enables
Web clients with any browser to search a Web site by filling in the
fields of an HTML query form.
Source: http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/nts/exec/overview/changed.asp
- Internet
- (Upper case I) The vast collection of inter-connected networks
that all use the TCP/IP protocols and that evolved from the ARPANET
of the late 60's and early 70's. The Internet now (July 1995) connects
roughly 60,000 independent networks into a vast global internet.
- internet
- (Lower case i) Any time you connect 2 or more networks
together, you have an internet - as in inter-national or inter-state.
- InterNIC
- InterNIC (now known as Network Solutions) currently holds an exclusive
contract with the U.S. government to assign domain names for .COM, .NET
and .ORG. The contract is scheduled to expire September 30, 1998. Network
Solutions is the company that runs the InterNIC registry.
- Intranet
- A private network inside a company or organization that uses
the same kinds of software that you would find on the public Internet,
but that is only for internal use.
As the Internet has become more popular many of the tools used on
the Internet are being used in private networks, for example, many
companies have web servers that are available only to employees.
Note that an Intranet may not actually be an internet
-- it may simply be a network.
- IP Number
- (Internet Protocol Number) -- Sometimes called a dotted quad. A unique
number consisting of 4 parts separated by dots, e.g.165.113.245.2
Every machine that is on the Internet has a unique IP number - if
a machine does not have an IP number, it is not really on the Internet.
Most machines also have one or more Domain Names that are easier
for people to remember.
- IRC
- (Internet Relay Chat) -- Basically a huge multi-user live chat facility.
There are a number of major IRC servers around the world which
are linked to each other. Anyone can create a channel and anything that
anyone types in a given channel is seen by all others in the channel.
Private channels can (and are) created for multi-person conference calls.
- ISDN
- (Integrated Services Digital Network) -- Basically a way to move more
data over existing regular phone lines. ISDN is rapidly becoming available
to much of the USA and in most markets it is priced very comparably
to standard analog phone circuits. It can provide speeds of roughly
128,000 bits-per-second over regular phone lines. In practice, most
people will be limited to 56,000 or 64,000 bits-per-second.
- ISP
- (Internet Service Provider) -- An institution that provides access
to the Internet in some form, usually for money.
- Java
- Java is a network-oriented programming language invented by Sun Microsystems
that is specifically designed for writing programs that can be safely
downloaded to your computer through the Internet and immediately run
without fear of viruses or other harm to your computer or files. Using
small Java programs (called "Applets"), Web pages can
include functions such as animations, calculators, and other fancy tricks.
We can expect to see a huge variety of features added to the Web
using Java, since you can write a Java program to do almost anything
a regular computer program can do, and then include that Java program
in a Web page.
- JDK
- (Java Development Kit) -- A software development package from Sun
Microsystems that implements the basic set of tools needed to write,
test and debug Java applications and applets
- Kilobyte
- A thousand bytes. Actually, usually 1024 (210)
bytes.
- LAN
- (Local Area Network) -- A computer network limited to the immediate
area, usually the same building or floor of a building.
- Leased-line
- Refers to a phone line that is rented for exclusive 24-hour, 7 -days-a-week
use from your location to another location. The highest speed data connections
require a leased line.
- Listserv
- The most common kind of maillist, Listservs originated on BITNET
but they are now common on the Internet.
- Local Registry Fees
- Most TLDs require initial registration fees as well as annual or bi-annual
renewal fees. Prices vary from cost-free to thousands of dollars per
domain depending on the TLD chosen. For example, .COM domains cost which
covers the first two years. Re newal fees for .COM are annually after
the first two years expire.
- Login
- Noun or a verb. Noun: The account name used to gain access to a computer
system. Not a secret (contrast with Password). Verb: The act
of entering into a computer system, e.g. Login to the WELL and then
go to the GBN conference.
- Maillist
- (or Mailing List) A (usually automated) system that allows
people to send e-mail to one address, whereupon their message
is copied and sent to all of the other subscribers to the maillist.
In this way, people who have many different kinds of e-mail access can
participate in discussions together.
- Megabyte
- A million bytes. A thousand kilobytes.
- MIDI
- Musical Instrument Digital Interface -- A network and accompanying
protocol developed in the 1970's for tranmitting various information
between musical and other devices including keyboards, samplers, lights,
controllers, etc.
- MIME
- (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) -- The standard for attaching
non-text files to standard Internet mail messages. Non-text files include
graphics, spreadsheets, formatted word-processor documents, sound files,
etc.
An email program is said to be MIME Compliant if it can both send
and receive files using the MIME standard.
When non-text files are sent using the MIME standard they are converted
(encoded) into text - although the resulting text is not really readable.
Generally speaking the MIME standard is a way of specifying both
the type of file being sent (e.g. a QuicktimeÅ video file),
and the method that should be used to turn it back into its original
form.
Besides email software, the MIME standard is also universally used
by Web Servers to identify the files they are sending to Web
Clients, in this way new file formats can be accommodated simply
by updating the Browsers' list of pairs of MIME-Types and appropriate
software for handling each type.
- Mirror
- Generally speaking, 'to mirror' is to maintain an exact copy of something.
Probably the most common use of the term on the Internet refers to 'mirror
sites' which are web sites, or FTP sites that maintain
exact copies of material originated at another location, usually in
order to provide more widespread access to the resource.
Another common use of the term 'mirror' refers to an arrangement
where information is written to more than one hard disk simultaneously,
so that if one disk fails, the computer keeps on working without losing
anything.
- Modem
- (MOdulator, DEModulator) -- A device that you connect to your computer
and to a phone line, that allows the computer to talk to other computers
through the phone system. Basically, modems do for computers what a
telephone does for humans.
- Modify (Domain Name)
- The database that the TLD registries maintain need to be accurate
in order for name resolution, billing, renewal notices and public records
to be processed correctly. Typically modifications are required when
nameservers need to change or the contacts change email or postal address
or phone number. The procedures for modifying records will depend on
the registry.
- MOO
- (Mud, Object Oriented) -- One of several kinds of multi-user role-playing
environments, so far only text-based.
- Mosaic
- The first WWW browser that was available for the Macintosh,
Windows, and UNIX all with the same interface. Mosaic really started
the popularity of the Web. The source-code to Mosaic has been licensed
by several companies and there are several other pieces of software
as good or better than Mosaic, most notably, Netscape.
- MUD
- (Multi-User Dungeon or Dimension) -- A (usually text-based) multi-user
simulation environment. Some are purely for fun and flirting, others
are used for serious software development, or education purposes and
all that lies in between. A significant feature of most MUDs is that
users can create things that stay after they leave and which other users
can interact with in their absence, thus allowing a world to be built
gradually and collectively.
- MUSE
- (Multi-User Simulated Environment) -- One kind of MUD - usually with
little or no violence.
- MX Record: Mail Exchange
- Mail Exchange record is part of the zone file and is used to designate
which mail server machine should process email for a specific domain.
- NT
- Windows NT® is Microsoft's® 32-bit operating system developed from
what was originally intended to be OS/2 3.0 before Microsoft ®and IBM
ceased joint development of OS/2. Used by web hosting companies in the
network environment to offer customers support for Microsoft base products
such as MS Access®, MS SQL® 7.0, and FrontPage® 2000.
- Name Servers
- A computer that performs the mapping of easily remembered domain names
to IP addresses. Sometimes referred to as a host server.
- Netiquette
- The etiquette on the Internet. See Also: Internet
- Netizen
- Derived from the term citizen, referring to a citizen of the Internet,
or someone who uses networked resources. The term connotes civic responsibility
and participation. See Also: Internet
- Netscape®
- A WWW Browser and the name of a company. The Netscape (tm)
browser was originally based on the Mosaic program developed
at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA).
Netscape has grown in features rapidly and is widely recognized
as the best and most popular web browser. Netscape corporation also
produces web server software.
Netscape provided major improvements in speed and interface over
other browsers, and has also engendered debate by creating new elements
for the HTML language used by Web pages -- but the Netscape
extensions to HTML are not universally supported.
The main author of Netscape, Mark Andreessen, was hired away from
the NCSA by Jim Clark, and they founded a company called Mosaic Communications
and soon changed the name to Netscape Communications Corporation.
- Network
- Any time you connect 2 or more computers together so that they can
share resources, you have a computer network. Connect 2 or more networks
together and you have an internet.
- Newsgroup
- The name for discussion groups on USENET. See Also: USENET
- NIC
- (Networked Information Center) -- Generally, any office that handles
information for a network. The most famous of these on the Internet
is Network Solutions, which is where new domain names are registered.
Another definition: NIC also refers to Network Interface Card which
plugs into a computer and adapts the network interface to the appropriate
standard. ISA, PCI, and PCMCIA cards are all examples of NICs.
- NNTP
- (Network News Transport Protocol) -- The protocol used by client
and server software to carry USENET postings back and
forth over a TCP/IP network. If you are using any of the
more common software such as Netscape, Nuntius, Internet Explorer,
etc. to participate in newsgroups then you are benefiting from
an NNTP connection.
- Node
- Any single computer connected to a network.
- OC-3
- Refers to a circuit that transmits 155,000,000 bits per second. This
is the size of the largest Internet backbone providers networks.
- Packet Switching
- The method used to move data around on the Internet. In packet
switching, all the data coming out of a machine is broken up into chunks,
each chunk has the address of where it came from and where it is going.
This enables chunks of data from many different sources to co-mingle
on the same lines, and be sorted and directed to different routes by
special machines along the way. This way many people can use the same
lines at the same time.
- Parking (Domain Name)
- Registries require the use of name servers or hosts for every domain
registered. Parking is the process by which someone selects a domain
name, and "parks" it by registering the domain name under someone's
name servers. Parking can be done by anyone, to anyone else who has
active name servers. However, parking a domain name alone will result
in no service (webhosting, e-mail) for that particular domain name.
- Password
- A code used to gain access to a locked system. Good passwords contain
letters and non-letters and are not simple combinations such as virtue7.
A good password might be: Hot-6
- Plug-in
- A (usually small) piece of software that adds features to a larger
piece of software. Common examples are plug-ins for the Netscape®
browser and web server. Adobe Photoshop® also uses
plug-ins.
The idea behind plug-in's is that a small piece of software is loaded
into memory by the larger program, adding a new feature, and that
users need only install the few plug-ins that they need, out of a
much larger pool of possibilities. Plug-ins are usually developed
by a third party.
- POP
- (Point of Presence, also Post Office Protocol) -- Two commonly used
meanings: Point of Presence and Post Office Protocol. A Point of Presence
usually means a city or location where a network can be connected to,
often with dial up phone lines. So if an Internet company says they
will soon have a POP in Belgrade, it means that they will soon have
a local phone number in Belgrade and/or a place where leased lines can
connect to their network. A second meaning, Post Office Protocol refers
to the way e-mail software such as Eudora gets mail from a mail server.
When you obtain a SLIP, PPP, or shell account you almost always get
a POP account with it, and it is this POP account that you tell your
e-mail software to use to get your mail.
- Port
- 3 meanings. First and most generally, a place where information goes
into or out of a computer, or both. E.g. the serial port on a personal
computer is where a modem would be connected.
On the Internet port often refers to a number that is part of a
URL, appearing after a colon (:) right after the domain
name. Every service on an Internet server listens on a
particular port number on that server. Most services have standard
port numbers, e.g. Web servers normally listen on port 80. Services
can also listen on non-standard ports, in which case the port number
must be specified in a URL when accessing the server, so you might
see a URL of the form:
gopher://peg.cwis.uci.edu:7000/
shows a gopher server running on a non-standard port (the standard
gopher port is 70). Finally, port also refers to translating a piece
of software to bring it from one type of computer system to another,
e.g. to translate a Windows program so that is will run on a Macintosh.
- Posting
- A single message entered into a network communications system. E.g.
A single message posted to a newsgroup or message board. See
Also: Newsgroup
- PPP
-
(Point to Point Protocol) -- Most well known as a protocol that
allows a computer to use a regular telephone line and a modem
to make TCP/IP connections and thus be really and truly on
the Internet.
- Propagation
- The process whereby the nameservers throughout the world have updated
their records for a specific domain. For example, if you move your domain
from one host to another, it will take around 24 hours or so for the
new address to broadcast everywhere. During that 24 hour period, the
traffic is decreasing at the old location and increasing at the new
location.
- PSTN
- (Public Switched Telephone Network) -- The regular old-fashioned telephone
system.
- Real Audio / Real Video
- Real Audio/Real Video enables users of personal computers and other
consumer electronic devices to send and receive audio, video and other
multimedia services using the Web.
enable users of personal computers and other consumer electronic
devices to send and receive audio, video and other multimedia services
using the Web.
- Register (Domain Name)
- Since every domain is unique, registries have been set up to assign
domains to individuals and organziations. When a domain is registered
with the appropriate registry, that domain is assigned and becomes no
longer available for anyone else to use. Typically, there are registration
and renewal fees (local registry fees) associated with the right to
use a domain. However, there are some TLDs that are provided at no charge.
- Registrant (Domain Name)
- The entity, organization or individual that will be using the domain
name.
- Registrar (Domain Name)
- Some registries don't provide the ability for end users to register
domains with them directly. They might require end users to purchase
the domain through an internet provider that is acting as the registrar.
- Registry (Domain Name)
- An organization responsible for assigning domain names for the TLD
that they manage. Furthermore, it is their responsibility to update
the global DNS tables that all nameservers use to resolve domain names.
For example, InterNIC is the registry for .COM, .NET and .ORG domain
names.
- Renewal (Domain Name)
- Most TLDs need to be renewed at some scheduled yearly interval. This
is an opportunity for both the registrant and the registry to update
their records as well as collect any applicable renewal fees.
- Resolution (domain Name)
- The conversion of an internet address or domain name into the corresponding
physical location.
- RFC
- (Request For Comments) -- The name of the result and the process for
creating a standard on the Internet. New standards are proposed
and published on line, as a Request For Comments. The Internet Engineering
Task Force is a consensus-building body that facilitates discussion,
and eventually a new standard is established, but the reference number/name
for the standard retains the acronym RFC, e.g. the official standard
for e-mail is RFC 822.
- Router
- A special-purpose computer (or software package) that handles the
connection between 2 or more networks. Routers spend all their
time looking at the destination addresses of the packets passing
through them and deciding which route to send them on.
- Security Certificate
- A chunk of information (often stored as a text file) that is used
by the SSL protocol to establish a secure connection.
Security Certificates contain information about who it belongs to,
who it was issued by, a unique serial number or other unique identification,
valid dates, and an encrypted 'fingerprint' that can be used to verify
the contents of the certificate.
In order for an SSL connection to be created both sides must have
a valid Security Certificate.
- Server
- A computer, or a software package, that provides a specific kind of
service to client software running on other computers. The term
can refer to a particular piece of software, such as a WWW server,
or to the machine on which the software is running, e.g.Our mail server
is down today, that's why e-mail isn't getting out. A single server
machine could have several different server software packages running
on it, thus providing many different servers to clients on the
network.
- Shockwave
- Shockwave, produced by Macromedia, allows you to view new forms of
entertainment on the Web, such as games, music, rich-media chat, interactive
product demos, and e-merchandising applications
- SLIP
- (Serial Line Internet Protocol) -- A standard for using a regular
telephone line (a serial line) and a modem to connect a computer
as a real Internet site. SLIP is gradually being replaced by
PPP.
- SMDS
- (Switched Multimegabit Data Service) -- A new standard for very high-speed
data transfer.
- SMTP
- (Simple Mail Transport Protocol) -- The main protocol used to send
electronic mail on the Internet.
SMTP consists of a set of rules for how a program sending mail and
a program receiving mail should interact.
Almost all Internet email is sent and received by clients
and servers using SMTP, thus if one wanted to set up an email
server on the Internet one would look for email server software that
supports SMTP.
- SNMP
- (Simple Network Management Protocol) -- A set of standards for communication
with devices connected to a TCP/IP network. Examples of these
devices include routers, hubs, and switches.
A device is said to be 'SNMP compatible' if it can be monitored
and/or controlled using SNMP messages. SNMP messages are known as
'PDU's' - Protocol Data Units.
Devices that are SNMP compatible contain SNMP 'agent' software to
receive, send, and act upon SNMP messages.
Software for managing devices via SNMP are available for every kind
of commonly used computer and are often bundled along with the device
they are designed to manage. Some SNMP software is designed to handle
a wide variety of devices.
- Spam (or Spamming)
- An inappropriate attempt to use a mailing list, or USENET
or other networked communications facility as if it was a broadcast
medium (which it is not) by sending the same message to a large number
of people who didn't ask for it. The term probably comes from a famous
Monty Python skit which featured the word spam repeated over and over.
The term may also have come from someone's low opinion of the food product
with the same name, which is generally perceived as a generic content-free
waste of resources. (Spam is a registered trademark of Hormel Corporation,
for its processed meat product.)
E.g. Mary spammed 50 USENET groups by posting the same message to
each.
- SQL
- (Structured Query Language) -- A specialized programming language
for sending queries to databases. Most industrial-strength and many
smaller database applications can be addressed using SQL. Each specific
application will have its own version of SQL implementing features unique
to that application, but all SQL-capable databases support a common
subset of SQL.
- SSL
- (Secure Sockets Layer) -- A protocol designed by Netscape Communications
to enable encrypted, authenticated communications across the Internet.
SSL used mostly (but not exclusively) in communications between
web browsers and web servers. URL's that begin
with 'https' indicate that an SSL connection will be used.
SSL provides 3 important things: Privacy, Authentication, and Message
Integrity.
In an SSL connection each side of the connection must have a Security
Certificate, which each side's software sends to the other. Each
side then encrypts what it sends using information from both its own
and the other side's Certificate, ensuring that only the intended
recipient can de-crypt it, and that the other side can be sure the
data came from the place it claims to have come from, and that the
message has not been tampered with.
- Sysop
- (System Operator) -- Anyone responsible for the physical operations
of a computer system or network resource. A System Administrator decides
how often backups and maintenance should be performed and the System
Operator performs those tasks.
- T-1
- A leased-line connection capable of carrying data at 1,544,000
bits-per-second. At maximum theoretical capacity, a T-1 line
could move a megabyte in less than 10 seconds. That is still
not fast enough for full-screen, full-motion video, for which you need
at least 10,000,000 bits-per-second. T-1 is the fastest speed commonly
used to connect networks to the Internet.
- T-3
- A leased-line connection capable of carrying data at 44,736,000
bits-per-second. This is more than enough to do full-screen, full-motion
video.
- TCP/IP
- (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) -- This is the suite
of protocols that defines the Internet. Originally designed for
the UNIX operating system, TCP/IP software is now available for
every major kind of computer operating system. To be truly on the Internet,
your computer must have TCP/IP software.
- Telnet
- The command and program used to login from one Internet
site to another. The telnet command/program gets you to the login: prompt
of another host.
- Terabyte
- 1024 gigabytes.
- Terminal
- A device that allows you to send commands to a computer somewhere
else. At a minimum, this usually means a keyboard and a display screen
and some simple circuitry. Usually you will use terminal software in
a personal computer - the software pretends to be (emulates) a physical
terminal and allows you to type commands to a computer somewhere else.
- Terminal Server
- A special purpose computer that has places to plug in many modems
on one side, and a connection to a LAN or host machine
on the other side. Thus the terminal server does the work of answering
the calls and passes the connections on to the appropriate node.
Most terminal servers can provide PPP or SLIP services
if connected to the Internet.
- Top Level Domain: (TLD)
- A Top Level Domain (TLD) is the uppermost in the hierarchy of domain
names. For example, communitech.net is our domain name. The "net"
is considered the TLD and the "communitech.net" is considered
the second level domain. Together they form a domain name which is unique.
There are two types of TLDs. The most common type is the Generic or
Global TLDs which include .COM, .NET, .ORG, .MIL, .INT and .EDU. There
is a possibility that new gTLDs will be introduced in the near future.
National or ccTLDs are two letter country code domains that are managed
by a registry designated and controlled by each specific country. Each
registry might have differing prices, residency requirements and structure.
- Trademark
- As it relates to domain names... a word, phrase or slogan used to
identify and distinguish the source of the goods or services. Trademark
law may be different worldwide. If someone registers a domain name such
as microsoft.to then Microsoft would need to go to the courts in Tonga
to fight to get the name back. Expensive international litigation is
one reason why it is important to protect your trademarks before someone
else registers the names.
- Transfer (Domain Name)
- On occasion, domains are sold to another organization or sometimes
the name of a company might change. Most registries require a letter
of permission from the old owner to hand over control to the new owner.
The procedures for Transfer of ownership will depend on the registry.
- TTFN
- (Ta Ta For Now) -- A shorthand appended to a comment written in an
online forum. See Also: IMHO , BTW
- UNIX
- A computer operating system (the basic software running on a computer,
underneath things like word processors and spreadsheets). UNIX is designed
to be used by many people at the same time (it is multi-user) and has
TCP/IP built-in. It is the most common operating system for servers
on the Internet.
- URL
- (Uniform Resource Locator) -- The standard way to give the address
of any resource on the Internet that is part of the World Wide Web (WWW).
A URL looks like this: http://www.communitech.net/glossary/ or telnet://anywhere.you.want
or news:new.newusers.questions etc.
The most common way to use a URL is to enter into a WWW browser
program, such as Netscape, or Lynx.
- USENET
- A world-wide system of discussion groups, with comments passed among
hundreds of thousands of machines. Not all USENET machines are on the
Internet, maybe half. USENET is completely decentralized, with
over 10,000 discussion areas, called newsgroups. See Also: Newsgroup
- UUENCODE
- (Unix to Unix Encoding) -- A method for converting files from Binary
to ASCII (text) so that they can be sent across the Internet
via e-mail.
- Veronica
- (Very Easy Rodent Oriented Net-wide Index to Computerized Archives)
-- Developed at the University of Nevada, Veronica is a constantly updated
database of the names of almost every menu item on thousands of gopher
servers. The Veronica database can be searched from most major gopher
menus. See Also: Gopher
- VB Script
- The Microsoft® Visual Basic® programming language, is a fast, portable,
lightweight interpreter for use in World Wide Web browsers and other
applications that use Microsoft® ActiveX® Controls, Automation servers,
and Java applets Souce: http://msdn.microsoft.com/scripting/default.htm
- WAIS
- (Wide Area Information Servers) -- A commercial software package that
allows the indexing of huge quantities of information, and then making
those indices searchable across networks such as the Internet.
A prominent feature of WAIS is that the search results are ranked (scored)
according to how relevant the hits are, and that subsequent searches
can find more stuff like that last batch and thus refine the search
process.
- WAN
- (Wide Area Network) -- Any internet or network that
covers an area larger than a single building or campus.
- Web
- See: WWW
- Whois
- Most registries maintain a database of domain names and their associated
contact information. Users can query these databases through a program
called Whois.
- WWW
- (World Wide Web) -- Two meanings - First, loosely used: the whole
constellation of resources that can be accessed using Gopher, FTP,
HTTP, telnet, USENET, WAIS and some other tools. Second, the universe
of hypertext servers (HTTP servers) which are the servers that
allow text, graphics, sound files, etc. to be mixed together.
- Zone file
- The group of files that reside on the domain host or nameserver. The
zone file designates a domain, its subdomains and mail server.
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