Internet Basics
Internet Basics
Internet Basics
Basics
What is the Internet?
The Internet, sometimes called simply "the Net," is a worldwide system of computer networks - a
network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information
from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other computers). The U.S. Department
of Defense laid the foundation of the Internet roughly 30 years ago with a network called ARPANET.
But the general public didn't use the Internet much until after the development of the World Wide Web in
the early 1990s.
In 1957, the U.S. government formed the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), a segment of the
Department of Defense charged with ensuring U.S. leadership in science and technology with military
applications. In 1969, ARPA established ARPANET, the forerunner of the Internet.
ARPANET was a network that connected major computers at the University of California at Los
Angeles, the University of California at Santa Barbara, Stanford Research Institute, and the University
of Utah. Within a couple of years, several other educational and research institutions joined the network.
In response to the threat of nuclear attack, ARPANET was designed to allow continued communication
if one or more sites were destroyed. Unlike today, when millions of people have access to the Internet
from home, work, or their public library, ARPANET served only computer professionals, engineers, and
scientists who knew their way around its complex workings.
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In June 1993, the Web boasted just 130 sites. By a year later, the number had risen to nearly 3,000. By
April 1998, there were more than 2.2 million sites on the Web.
Today, the Internet is a public, cooperative, and self-sustaining facility accessible to hundreds of millions
of people worldwide. Physically, the Internet uses a portion of the total resources of the currently
existing public telecommunication networks. Technically, what distinguishes the Internet is its use of a
set of protocols called TCP/IP (for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). Two recent
adaptations of Internet technology, the intranet and the extranet, also make use of the TCP/IP protocol.
For many Internet users, electronic mail (e-mail) has practically replaced the Postal Service for short
written transactions. Electronic mail is the most widely used application on the Net. You can also carry
on live "conversations" with other computer users, using Internet Relay Chat (IRC). More recently,
Internet telephony hardware and software allows real-time voice conversations.
The most widely used part of the Internet is the World Wide Web (often abbreviated "WWW" or called
"the Web"). Its outstanding feature is hypertext, a method of instant cross-referencing. In most Web
sites, certain words or phrases appear in text of a different color than the rest; often this text is also
underlined. When you select one of these words or phrases, you will be transferred to the site or page
that is relevant to this word or phrase. Sometimes there are buttons, images, or portions of images that
are "clickable." If you move the pointer over a spot on a Web site and the pointer changes into a hand,
this indicates that you can click and be transferred to another site.
To view files on the Web, you need Web browsing software. You use this software to view different
locations on the Web, which are known as Web pages. A group of Web pages is a Web site. The first page
of a Web site is often called the home page.
Just as each household in the world has a unique address, each Web page in the world has a unique
Internet address, sometimes called a URL. For example, the Internet address of the Windows home page
is http://www.microsoft.com/windows.
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. The
on your desktop.
Address
Bar
Frames
Standard
Buttons
Toolbar
Menu Bar
Scroll Bars
Title Bar
Toolbars
The Microsoft Internet Explorer toolbar consists of buttons that are shortcuts for menu commands. They
make browsing faster and easier.
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10
11 12
13
14
1.
B
ack. Lets you return to pages you've viewed, beginning with the most recent. Right-click the Back
button and select from a list of recently visited sites.
2. Forward. Lets you move forward through pages you've viewed using the Back button. Right-click
the Forward button and select from a list of recently visited sites.
3. Stop. Halts the process of downloading a Web page. Click this if you want to stop downloading a
page for any reason for example, if you're having trouble downloading it or if you don't want to wait
for it to download. Then try downloading it again or browse elsewhere.
4. Refresh. Updates any Web page stored in your disk cache with the latest content. When you return
to a page that you've visited, your browser displays the file stored in your disk cache, rather than the
current page on the World Wide Web. If a web page doesn't come up the whole way or is taking
abnormally long to load, try the Refresh or Reload button - sometimes this will load the page better.
5. Home. Returns you to your home page. You can designate any Web page as your home page.
6. Search. Displays a choice of popular Internet search engines in the left pane. Your search results
appear in the left pane, too. When you click a link, the page appears in the right pane, so you don't
lose sight of your search results.
7. Favorites. Displays a list of the sites you have marked. Click any item in the list to jump to it.
8. History. Shows a list of Web sites you've visited.
9. Mail. Connects you to the Microsoft Outlook Express messaging and collaboration client so you can
read e-mail and newsgroup messages.
10. Print. Prints the page you're viewing. This is one way to save information from the Internet so that
you don't have to reconnect to view it again. You can even print the URL associated with each
hyperlink, making it easy to navigate to the site later.
11. Edit. Opens a file in the Microsoft Word word processor that contains the HTML code for the page
you're viewing so you can see and even edit it.
12. Discussion. Access a discussion server.
13. Messenger. Opens Windows Messenger.
14. Media. Displays a list of audio and video media options using Real Player or the Windows Media
Player.
What is a URL?
Every server on the Internet has an IP number, a unique number consisting of 4 parts separated by dots.
The IP number is the server's address.
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165.113.245.2
128.143.22.55
However, it is harder for people to remember numbers than to remember word combinations. So,
addresses are given "word-based" addresses called URLs. The URL and the IP number are one and the
same.
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.matisse.net/seminars.html
telnet://well.sf.ca.us
gopher://gopher.ed.gov/
The URL is divided into sections:
transfer/transport protocol :// server (or domain). generic top level domain/path/filename
The first part of a URL defines the transport protocol.
http:// (HyperText Transport Protocol) moves graphical, hypertext files
ftp:// (File Transfer Protocol) moves a file between 2 computers
gopher:// (Gopher client) moves text-based files
news: (News group reader) accesses a discussion group
telnet:// (Telnet client) allows remote login to another computer
Here's an example:
http://www.vrml.k12.la.us/tltc/mainmenu.htm
1. You do not have to enter http:// , most browsers will add that information when you press Enter or
click the
2. To view recently visited Web sites, click the down arrow at the end of the address field.
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3. When you start typing a frequently used Web address in the Address bar, a list of similar addresses
appears that you can choose from. And if a Web-page address is wrong, Internet Explorer can search
for similar addresses to try to find a match.
4. The URL must be typed correctly. If you get a Server Does Not Have A DNS Entry message, this
message tells you that your browser can't locate the server (i.e. the computer that hosts the Web
page). It could mean that the network is busy or that the server has been removed or taken down for
maintenance. Check your spelling and try again later.
.milmilitary site
.intorganizations established by international treaty
.bizcommercial and personal
.infocommercial and personal
.namepersonal sites
Additional three-letter, four-letter, and longer top-level domains are frequently added. Each country
linked to the Web has a two-letter top-level domain, for example .fr is France, .ie is Ireland.
The Cache
When you explore the World Wide Web, your browser keeps track of the pages you've visited and saves
them on your hard disk so they'll load faster when you return to them. This saves you time and money
because you can view the saved pages without being connected to the Internet. The saved files, your
"Temporary Internet Files", are stored in your disk cache.
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Left click, hold and drag the link from the Links toolbar into the Favorites window.
Release the mouse. The link is now placed in Favorites.
Favorites
Go to Favorites on the menu bar. To add a link to the
Favorites folder click Add to Favorites. The following
window opens.
Organize Favorites
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are able to do through your computer is access one or more of many intermediate search tools available
now. You search a search tool's database or collection of sites -- a relatively small subset of the entire
World Wide Web. The search tool provides you with hypertext links with URLs to other pages. You
click on these links, and retrieve documents, images, sound, and more from individual servers around
the world.
There is no way for anyone to search the entire Web, and any search tool that claims that it offers it all to
you is distorting the truth.
Characteristics
Examples
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Search Engines
(& Meta-Search
Engines)
Subject Directories
Specialized Databases
(The Invisible Web)
Search Engines
recommended: Google, Alta
Vista Advanced Search,
Northern Light Power Search,
Alltheweb
Meta-Search Engines:
Go2Net/MetaCrawler,
Ixquick, Copernic, ProFusion
Search , SavvySearchan
experimental search system.
My Yahoo!
Snap.com
Web Portals
Use the plus (+) and minus (-) signs in front of words to force their inclusion and/or exclusion in
searches.
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A "ZILLION" DOCUMENTS --You probably typed only one term, and it was
pretty common. Think of some synonyms. Try adding at least two more specific
terms to your string.
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Boolean logic takes its name from British mathematician George Boole (1815-1864), who wrote about a
system of logic designed to produce better search results by formulating precise queries. He called it the
"calculus of thought." From his writings, we have derived Boolean logic and its operators: AND, OR,
and NOT, which we use to link words and phrases for more precise queries. Always use CAPS when
typing Boolean operators in your search statements.
BOOLEAN "AND"
The Boolean AND narrows your search by retrieving only documents that contain every one of the
keywords you enter. The more terms you enter, the narrower your search becomes.
EXAMPLE: truth AND justice
EXAMPLE: truth AND justice AND ethics AND congress
BOOLEAN "OR"
The Boolean OR expands your search by returning documents in which either or both keywords appear.
Since the OR operator is usually used for keywords that are similar or synonymous, the more keywords
you enter, the more documents you will retrieve.
EXAMPLE: college OR university
EXAMPLE: college OR university OR campus OR higher education
Always enclose OR statements in parenthesis.
BOOLEAN "NOT" / "AND NOT"
The Boolean NOT or AND NOT limits your search by returning only your first keyword but not the
second, even if the first word appears in that document, too.
EXAMPLE: bulimia AND NOT anorexia
EXAMPLE: cowboys AND NOT dallas
NESTING -- WITH BOOLEAN OPERATORS
Nesting, i.e., using parentheses, is an effective way to combine several search statements into one search
statement. Use parentheses to separate keywords when you are using more than one operator and three
or more keywords.
EXAMPLE: (scotch OR bourbon) AND NOT (beer OR wine)
(For best results, always enclose OR statements in parentheses.)
BOOLEAN LOGIC REDUX
Boolean logic is not always simple or easy. Different search engines handle Boolean operators
differently. For example, some accept NOT, while one accepts ANDNOT as one word, others AND NOT
as two words. Some require the operators to be typed in capital letters while others do not.
Some search engines use drop-down menu options to spell out the Boolean logic in short phrases. For
example, "All of the words" or "Must contain" equates to AND; "Any of the words" or "Should contain"
equates to OR; and "Must not contain" equates to NOT.
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Viruses/Worms: These usually destructive computer programs hide inside of innocent looking
programs, web pages and e-mail attachments. When triggered, often by the date or time on the
computer's internal clock or calendar, it executes a nuisance or damaging function such as displaying a
message on your screen, corrupting your files, or reformatting your hard disk. Today, worms access your
e-mail address book and send themselves automatically. Make sure you've got virus protection software
installed and that you update their "virus definition" files at least monthly.
Information need
Search strategy
Yahoo
on the Advanced
Search button) - added options: language, media
type, page depth.
FAST/All the Web - added options: document size.
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Ask Jeeves!
questions
I need quality, evaluated pathfinders
prepared by a subject expert.
AltaVista
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phrase or word.
I need information on a proper name (a place, A person search on HotBot SuperSearch will retrieve the
person, or object).
name in both reversed and normal order (e.g., Picasso,
Pablo and Pablo Picasso).
I need biographical information.
Biographical Dictionary
a name.
Biography.com - search for paragraph-length biographies.
Lives - alphabetical links of biographies, autobiographies,
First Gov
AltaVista News
editors
- searches broadcasts (1977-), In Depth news
analysis and background (British focus).
PBS Online NewsHour - searches daily broadcasts
(American focus).
US News Briefings - editor-compiled overview, with links
to stories, key biographies, relevant documents and Web
sites.
BBC Archive
Social Issues
countries
- links to international newspapers, news
media, internet services, magazines, and press agencies.
Abyz News Links
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Statistical Information
help page
Invisible Web
Academic Info
list.
- full-text keyword search, or
drill down a subject directory, of academic databases.
ProFusion - subject search, or drill down a directory, of
electronic texts and 500 databases.
InvisibleWeb - subject search, or drill down a directory.
Large index of 10,000 databases compiled by crawlers
and human editors.
Complete Planet - search subject, or drill down a subject
list. Indexes 90,000 searchable databases
Geniusfind - topic-specific databases and search engines
Depth of Search: Choosing Invisible Web Databases - small
list geared to K-12
Resource Discovery Network
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sites.
American Memory
CNET
I need a map.
Ask A+ Locator
librarians.
24/7 - live reference from public library system.
Internet Public Library Reference - e-mail reference.
Ask a Librarian - e-mail and live help from Library of
Congress.
I want notice of new sites as they're
announced.
Scout Report
KidsClick!
Cohen, Laura B. "Searching the Web: The Human Element Emerges." Choice Aug. 2000: 23.
2
.Sullivan, Danny. "Meta Search or Meta Ads?" 23 May 2001. Search Engine Watch.
<http://www.searchenginewatch.com/sereport/01/05-metasearch.html>
3
Cohen, Laura B. "The Web as a Research Tool: Teaching Strategies for Instructors." Choice Aug. 1999: 29.
4 Sullivan, Danny. "Finding Disaster Coverage at Search Engines" 12 Sept. 2001. Search Engine Watch.
<http://www.searchenginewatch.com/sereport/01/09-wtc.html>
For search engine features and performance see Search Engine Watch <http://www.searchenginewatch.com>
To understand how search engines search and rank results, see "Search Engine Optimization" at SearchEngines.com
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<http://www.searchengines.com/>
http://www.calendarserver.com/
Certificate Creator
http://geography.about.com/cs/blankoutlinemaps/
Boolean Machine
http://www.CertificateCreator.com/
http://kathyschrock.net/rbs3k/boolean/
Citation Machine
http://puzzlemaker.school.discovery.com/
http://landmarkproject.com/citation_machine/cm_book.php3
Create a Graph
http://school.discovery.com/quizcenter/quizcenter.html
http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/Graphing/
http://school.discovery.com/teachingtools/
worksheetgenerator/
http://www.venndiagram.com/venn01.html
eBoard (subscription)
http://eboard.com/
Filamentality
http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/
Links Builder
http://www.ozline.com/electraguide/
http://landmark-project.com/classweb/tools/links_builder.php3
http://landmark-project.com/classweb/tools/question_builder.php3
Quia (subscription)
http://www.quia.com/
ElectraGuide
Project Poster
http://products.scrtec.org/poster/
SURWEB
http://www.surweb.org/
http://www.3dtextmaker.com/
http://teachers.teach-nology.com/web_tools/materials/timelines/
Presentation Materials
One page URL handout (PDF format)
http://kathyschrock.net/cooking/onepage.pdf
RubiStar
http://rubistar.4teachers.org/
Rubric Builder
http://landmark-project.com/classweb/tools/rubric_builder.php3
Trackstar
http://trackstar.hprtec.org/
http://wizard.hprtec.org/
Yahoo eGroups
http://groups.yahoo.com/
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Printing
To print the web page being viewed:
Go to File on the Menu Bar and click Print.
Click OK.
To print a selection from a web page:
Highlight the text you desire to printleft click and drag to end of selection.
Go to File on the Menu Bar and click Print.
In the Print Range section of the Print dialog box, click the radial button next to Selection.
Click OK.
To print preview a web page being viewed (to see how the page will appear when printed):
Go to File on the Menu Bar and click Print Preview. A window opens displaying how the page
will appear when printed. You can make changes to the page layout or
To make changes to the Page Layout, click the Page Setup button. Make the desired changes
then click OK to view the page again with the new settings.
To print, click the Print button.
To close the Print Preview window, click the Close button. This will return you to the page
being viewed.
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References:
Abilock, Debbie. (2002) Choose the Best Search for your Information Need. Retrieved Aug. 17, 2002, from NoodleTools,
Inc.: http://www.noodletools.com/debbie (Permission granted 8/18/02)
Barker, Joe. (2001) Things To Know Before You Begin Searching. Retrieved Aug. 17, 2002, from Library, University of
California, Berkeley: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/ThingsToKnow.html
Barker, Joe. (2001) Best Search Tools. Retrieved Aug. 17, 2002, from Library, University of California, Berkeley:
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/ThingsToKnow.html
Chamberlain, Ellen. (2002) Bare Bones 101. Retrieved Aug. 18, 2002, from Board of Trustees of the University of South
Carolina: http://www.sc.edu/beaufort/library/bones.html
(1999) Internet Basics. Retrieved Aug. 13, 2002, from Northwest Educational Technology Consortium:
http://www.netc.org/basics/
(2002) The Complete Internet Guide and Web Tutorial. Retrieved Aug. 10, 2002, from Microsoft Corporation:
http://www.microsoft.com/insider/guide/intro.asp
An Introduction to the Internet Using Internet Explorer 5.0. Retrieved Aug. 10, 2002, from Lafayette Parish School System
Instructional Technology Department: http://www.lft.k12.la.us/handouts/InternetExplorer5Handout.htm
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