How does the internet work?
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- Martin Abend
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How does the internet work?
Is there a website that explains how the internet or at least the www works? I'm plain stupid when it comes to these technical things, so I'd be glad if someone knows something.
Thanks.
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
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Thanks.
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
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Martin-- That is a very general question that might require several large books to adequately answer. Here is a good place to start:
http://howstuffworks.com/sc-computers-internet.htm
Have fun!!! --Everett
http://howstuffworks.com/sc-computers-internet.htm
Have fun!!! --Everett
- Bill Terry
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Once you know a little about the technical 'how' it seems somewhat miraculous that it works at all...
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bterry.home.netcom.com
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bterry.home.netcom.com
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- Bobby Lee
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Is there a "Proftpd for Dummies" book? I need one right about now.
The internet includes a wide range of things, but the most common uses are web pages and email. The underlying technology is TCP/IP, which stands for "Transfer Control Protocol / Internet Protocol". A protocol is a convention that two entities use to communicate formally with each other.
In TCP/IP, every device has a unique IP address. You may have seen these addresses. Their human readable form is like this: 207.189.56.85 - four numbers between zero and 255, separated by 3 dots.
There are about 4 billion IP addresses (256^4), but each number in the sequence narrows it down quite a bit. In simplified terms, to reach the address above I could send my data to 207.x.x.x where the 207 router would take over. 207, like other routers at its level, handles requests for about 16 million addresses. It would send it to 207.189.x.x which handles about 65,000 addresses. From there it gets forwarded to 207.189.56.x which only has to deal with 256 machines, and then it gets routed directly to the destination machine.
I doesn't really work like that, of course. There are all sorts of smart tricks and shortcuts built into the system, and there are ways for whole networks to share a single IP address. But the system I described above is a convenient abstraction that explains the basic idea.
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The internet includes a wide range of things, but the most common uses are web pages and email. The underlying technology is TCP/IP, which stands for "Transfer Control Protocol / Internet Protocol". A protocol is a convention that two entities use to communicate formally with each other.
In TCP/IP, every device has a unique IP address. You may have seen these addresses. Their human readable form is like this: 207.189.56.85 - four numbers between zero and 255, separated by 3 dots.
There are about 4 billion IP addresses (256^4), but each number in the sequence narrows it down quite a bit. In simplified terms, to reach the address above I could send my data to 207.x.x.x where the 207 router would take over. 207, like other routers at its level, handles requests for about 16 million addresses. It would send it to 207.189.x.x which handles about 65,000 addresses. From there it gets forwarded to 207.189.56.x which only has to deal with 256 machines, and then it gets routed directly to the destination machine.
I doesn't really work like that, of course. There are all sorts of smart tricks and shortcuts built into the system, and there are ways for whole networks to share a single IP address. But the system I described above is a convenient abstraction that explains the basic idea.
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<small><img align=right src="http://b0b.com/b0b.gif" width="64" height="64">Bobby Lee - email: quasar@b0b.com - gigs - CDs
Sierra Session 12 (E9), Williams 400X (E9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (F Diatonic)
Sierra Laptop 8 (D13), Fender Stringmaster (E13, A6)
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Martin,
Ziff-Davis has published a book by Preston Gralla, entitled "How The Internet Works,
Milleninum Edition" . It’s available from Amazon.com.
www.amazon.com
Using the Search function, select "books" and enter the title as the ID.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Vince Smith on 22 March 2001 at 05:14 PM.]</p></FONT>
Ziff-Davis has published a book by Preston Gralla, entitled "How The Internet Works,
Milleninum Edition" . It’s available from Amazon.com.
www.amazon.com
Using the Search function, select "books" and enter the title as the ID.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Vince Smith on 22 March 2001 at 05:14 PM.]</p></FONT>
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- Martin Abend
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You guys are great, thank you very much!
Most of all I need the infos for the "kid's club" of my church that I'm running. They are very interested (aged 13-16) in stuff like that and since I found nobody that would explain this to them I'll have to do this myself...
Hey Everett,
Howstuffworks.com is just fantastic! They had all the info's I needed, and together with b0b's short explanation I think I can handle the job.
Again, thanks you very much!
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
s-10 sierra crown gearless 3 x4 - fender hotrod deluxe
Most of all I need the infos for the "kid's club" of my church that I'm running. They are very interested (aged 13-16) in stuff like that and since I found nobody that would explain this to them I'll have to do this myself...
Hey Everett,
Howstuffworks.com is just fantastic! They had all the info's I needed, and together with b0b's short explanation I think I can handle the job.
Again, thanks you very much!
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
s-10 sierra crown gearless 3 x4 - fender hotrod deluxe
- Bill Llewellyn
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The Internet is nothing but a bunch of computers, most of them just like yours, connected to each other. Internet Service Providers run network lines out to you and they lay cable and connect their networks to others. Each ISP will do this with more than just one other network. Most do it with at least a dozen. And all of these computers that connect to each other is called the Internet.
Internet is TCP. TCP enables you to look at Web pages because it handles sending out the requests for the page and giving you a response.
Many times more than one physical way to get Internet traffic from one point to another (similiar to roads). The IP protocal is responsible for finding the quickest way, bypassing "rush hour" traffic and getting you the content. However, if all of the "roads" are slow, then your connection will be slowed down.
Jonathan
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www.cullifer.com
Internet is TCP. TCP enables you to look at Web pages because it handles sending out the requests for the page and giving you a response.
Many times more than one physical way to get Internet traffic from one point to another (similiar to roads). The IP protocal is responsible for finding the quickest way, bypassing "rush hour" traffic and getting you the content. However, if all of the "roads" are slow, then your connection will be slowed down.
Jonathan
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www.cullifer.com
- Mark Herrick
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- Jack Stoner
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- Bill Terry
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Here ya go... WARNING do not read if you're trying to stay awake.
http://www.msic.com/technical/network_protocol/osi_info.shtml
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