Teach Yourself the Internet in 24 Hours
- Hour 3 -
|
Service | Server Type and Domain Name (Complete URL) | Lesson |
Web | http://www.server.name | 13-16 |
Gopher | gopher://gopher.server.name | 18 |
FTP | ftp://ftp.server.name | 17 |
Telnet | telnet://server.name | 19 |
mailto:address@server.name | 5-8 |
In the following lessons, you'll learn a lot about the tools that you use to access the World Wide Web. The following are a few terms that you will see frequently:
Notice that many of the lessons in this book contain practical applications of the Internet. In particular, Part VI, "Getting the Most Out of the Internet," is dedicated to many specific examples. The following sections merely provide you with a brief overview of some of the features available on the Web.
One of the most commonly used capabilities of the Web is its ability to help you locate just about anything. Planning to take a trip or need to locate a place somewhere in the world? Several Web sites are designed to help you do just that. One of the best, MapQuest, is featured in Lesson 21, "The Internet for Home: Entertainment, Travel, and More."
Is it time to sell your old, rusty car and purchase a new one? Good news! The World Wide Web contains sites for every automobile manufacturer in the world. Figure 3.2 shows one example. Current prices, lease programs, different models, various options, company information, dealership locations nearest you, and residuals are all available at these sites.
The Jeep home page tells all about Jeep brand vehicles.
Suppose you want to attend a class next year at a local campus or university. Well, just about every educational institute maintains a site on the World Wide Web. Michigan State University, for example, provides an extensive site that offers information ranging from courses available to credit prices, degree program details, and career planning services, as you can see in Figure 3.3.
Many educational opportunities are available on the Web because many institutions offer for-credit courses and live lectures, right on the Internet. For more details, go to Lesson 22, "Education on the Internet."
Some of the most practical uses for the World Wide Web include activities in which you participate on a regular basis. If you're interested in owning stock (or if you already do), for example, you can find annual reports, current stock prices, and other pertinent information relating to just about any corporation or business, as shown in Figure 3.4. You can also buy and sell stock directly on the World Wide Web without leaving your home and without the cost of a stockbroker to trade for you.
Michigan State University's home page offers a multitude of information on courses, faculty and staff, degree programs, and more.
Check out the Nasdaq home page on the World Wide Web for free.
The business-minded can find much more on the Web. Job searches, resume services, and so on are available on the Web. For more details, look at Lesson 23, "Taking Care of Business Using the Internet."
Okay, now that you know what's out there on the World Wide Web, you may want to know what it looks like. Again, the only limits to what you find are the imaginations of the Webmasters. The World Wide Web acts as the canvas for millions of undiscovered artists around the world.
Sites display text, graphic images, links, and attached media in a variety of styles, designs, and patterns. Many pages display these elements in a simple format that's easy to understand and navigate. Much of what appears on the Web, however, may use some special elements to add that extra bit of "zing" to a page. Several such features for designing sites include tables, image maps, frames, and animation. Webmasters use these features to design unique, effective, and attractive home pages.
Tables involve the organization of information into a row and column format. This World Wide Web feature is particularly useful for charting and graphing text, graphic images, and links, as you can see in the example shown in Figure 3.5. Furthermore, if the desired appearance involves the arrangement of information into specific dimensions, tables provide the perfect format.
ESPN's home page makes effective use of tables with borders you can see.
On the World Wide Web, you will encounter image maps as well. This feature enables you to click various locations in an graphic image to link to different documents. Look back at Figure 3.3; notice that the MSU home page consists of an image map. Clicking the appropriate area links you to the section of the Web site you choose.
Frames are a more advanced design tool for World Wide Web sites. The use of frames
allows the division of the display screen into separate sections, each of which may
contain text, graphic images, and links. Frames are especially useful if a site contains
a list of links related to a certain subject, and the Webmaster wants the linked
documents to appear on the screen while the list of links remains visible as well.
Figure 3.6 shows a good example of this use.
Figure 3.6.
Andersen Consulting provides an excellent example of the use of frames on its World Wide Web home page.
Just A Minute: Being able to tell the difference between tables and frames might take you awhile because they often look the same. If you're confused, simply scroll down or across the page. If some of the information doesn't move, you know the page uses frames.
The features of World Wide Web design I've already talked about serve their duty as practical, organized, and attractive components of a site. However, nothing quite captivates the attention of users like animation does. Animation presents text, links, and graphic images in visibly moving action, as shown in Figure 3.7. Typically, the lively animation draws more attention, promises more excitement, and offers a more interesting display of information than the conventional presentations.
On the Banking and Finance home page, a colorful fish swims horizontally across the screen, and a Pegasus flaps her wings in the upper-left corner.
With the various tools available for constructing a World Wide Web site, you may encounter just about everything in your imagination during your travels. What is not available now will be shortly, as futuristic ideas for site development already live in the minds of designers.
Some futuristic plans for World Wide Web sites include 3-D and interactive displays. The technologies that facilitate this type of design now exist, and a few sites already show a glimpse of the future.
In this lesson, I delivered a brief introduction to the World Wide Web. You learned about the history behind the creation of the World Wide Web and found out about CERN and the phenomenal growth of the Web in the last 15 years. You also learned some of the terminology you may see in your travels. Furthermore, you discovered the practical uses of the Web and what you will see in your travels.
Finally, you got a quick view of some of the elements that will make the Web exciting for you and others, such as frames, tables, and animation.
The following workshop helps solidify the skills that you learned in this lesson.
Q What is the difference between a World Wide Web site, a home page, and a page?
A A World Wide Web site refers to the overall collection of documents and files present for a single organization or person. The home page usually denotes the first display of information you see when you visit a World Wide Web site. From that home page, any other related documents to which you can link at the same site are simply known as pages.
Q Why would a site related to any given subject, no matter how ridiculous, be on the World Wide Web?
A Well, you've heard of freedom of speech, right? The only regulations currently enforced for the World Wide Web are the limits of the imagination. So, if you think about it, and you have the time and money to create and maintain a site, you can put just about anything out there, no matter how absurd.
Q Is knowing what formatting a World Wide Web site uses for displaying its information important for me?
A Knowing the formatting is not important unless you plan to create your own World Wide Web site. Otherwise, tables, image maps, frames, and animation are just useful and attractive ways for displaying information that also make the Web a more interesting place to visit. Actually, the less you notice about how a site is actually put together, the better the designer has put it together.
Take the following quiz to see how much you've learned.
Write down several aspects of your daily life, such as what kind of car you drive, where you live, what you fix for dinner, and what movies you would like to see. Now take your notes and use them to bookmark Lesson 16, "Searching the Web for Virtually Anything." After you learn how to search the Web for information, try to find the things you're interested in.
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