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 The Internet Book: Everything you Need to Know About Computer Networking & How the Internet Works 4th Edition
  

  The Internet Book: Everything you Need to Know About Computer Networking & How the Internet Works 4th Edition by Douglas Comer

  • Published by: PRENTICE-HALL
  • Author: Douglas Comer
  • Page Count: 380
  • Group: NEW USERS
  • ISBN: 0132335530/9780132335539
  • Published: Nov 2006

Our Price: 28.99
 

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Book Information and Description:

The Internet Book: Everything you Need to Know About Computer Networking & How the Internet Works 4th Edition
Internet Book, The: Everything You Need to Know About Computer Networking and How the Internet Works, 4/e utilizes a non-technical perspective to explain the technology of how computers communicate, what the Internet is, how the Internet works, and what the Internet can do for people. This book works to fully connect readers to the “big picture” by presenting a solid overview of networking and the Internet, rather than burying them with details. Comer assumes no prior background in computer networking or the Internet. Introduces computer communication system concepts and technology, reviews the history of the Internet and its growth, describes basic Internet technology and capabilities, and describes services currently available on the Internet and how to use them. For anyone interested in learning how to navigate the Internet to its full potential.

CONTENTS:

PART I Introduction To Networking

  Chapter 1 The Internet Has Arrived

  The World Has Changed

  Numbers Do Not Tell The Story

  Learning About The Internet

  Understanding The Big Picture

  Terminology And Technology

  Growth And Adaptability

  The Impact Of The Internet

  Organization Of The Book

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 2 Getting Started: Hands-On Experience

  Introduction

  The Web: Sites And Pages

  Web Browsers and Browsing

  Using A Browser

  Examples Of Web Sites And Services

  Internet Search

  Summary

  Chapter 3 Telephones Everywhere

  Introduction

  A Communication Service

  Selling Communication

  Limited Access

  High Cost

  The Difficult Transition

  Ubiquitous Access

  Relevance To The Internet

  Chapter 4 The World Was Once Analog

  Introduction

  Sound, Vibrations, And Analog Recording

  Analog Electronic Devices

  Many Electronic Devices Are Analog

  The First Analog Communication

  Analog Is Simple But Inaccurate

  Sending An Analog Signal Across A Wire

  Digital Music

  The Digital Revolution

  Computers Are Digital

  Digital Recording

  Using Digital To Recreate Analog

  Why Digital Music?

  Summary

  Chapter 5 The Once And Future Digital Network

  Introduction

  The World Was Previously Digital

  A Telegraph Is Digital

  Morse Code

  Letters And Digits In Morse Code

  Users Did Not Encounter Morse Code

  Virtually Instant Communication

  Speed Is Relative

  The Telephone Became Digital

  Relevance To The Internet

  Binary Encoding Of Data On The Internet

  Why Use Two Symbols?

  Summary

  Chapter 6 Basic Communication

  Introduction

  Communication Using Electricity

  Signals On Wires

  Information Coding

  Modems Allow Two-Way Traffic

  A Character Code For Digital Information

  Detecting Errors

  Summary

  Chapter 7 The Local Area Network Arrives

  Introduction

  Motivation

  Interchangeable Media

  A Computer Consists Of Circuit Boards

  Circuit Boards Plug Into A Computer

  Connecting One Computer To Another

  LAN Technologies

  Connecting A Computer To A LAN

  The Importance Of LAN Technology

  Relationship To The Internet

  PART II A Brief History Of The Internet

  Chapter 8 Internet: The Early Years

  Many Independent Networks

  The Proliferation Of LANs

  Facts About LANs

  LANs Are Incompatible

  Wide Area Technologies Exist

  Few WANs, Many LANs

  WANs and LANs Are Incompatible

  The Desirability Of A Single Network

  The Department Of Defense Had Multiple Networks

  Connecting Disconnected Machines

  The Internet Emerges

  The ARPANET Backbone

  Internet Software

  The Name Is TCP/IP

  The Shock Of An Open System

  Open Systems Are Necessary

  TCP/IP Documentation Is Online

  The Military Adopts TCP/IP

  Summary

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 9 Two Decades Of Incredible Growth

  Introduction

  Disseminating The Software

  Meanwhile, Back In Computer Science

  The Internet Meets UNIX

  The U.S. Military Makes A Commitment

  The Internet Doubles In Size In One Year

  Every Computer Science Department

  Graduate Students Volunteer Their Time

  The IAB evolves

  The IETF

  Doubling Again In A Year

  The Internet Improves Science

  NSF Takes A Leadership Role

  Target: All Of Science And Engineering

  NSF’s Approach

  The NSFNET Backbone

  The ANS Backbone

  Exponential Growth

  A Commercial Assessment

  The End Of Growth

  Chapter 10 The Global Internet

  Introduction

  Early ARPA Networks

  Electronic Mail Among Computers

  BITNET And FIDONET

  Networks In Europe

  EBONE: The Internet In Europe

  Backbones And Internet Hierarchy

  Internet On All Continents

  The World Of Internet after 1998

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 11 A Global Information Infrastructure

  Introduction

  Existing Infrastructure

  Communication Infrastructure

  The Internet Infrastructure

  The Internet Offers Diverse Information Services

  TCP/IP Provides Communication Facilities

  A Personal Note

  PART III How The Internet Works

  Chapter 12 Packet Switching

  Introduction

  Sharing Saves Money

  Sharing Introduces Delays

  Sharing Wires

  Selectable Channels

  Sharing By Taking Turns

  Packet Switching Avoids Delays

  Each Packet Must Be Labeled

  Computers Have Addresses

  Packets Are Not All The Same Size

  Packet Transmission Seems Instantaneous

  Sharing Is Automatic

  Network Hardware Handles Sharing

  Many Devices Can Use Packet Switching

  Relevance To The Internet

  Summary

  Chapter 13 Internet: A Network Of Networks

  Introduction

  Network Technologies Are Incompatible

  Coping With Incompatibility

  Two Fundamental Concepts

  Using A Computer To Interconnect Networks

  Interconnecting Computers Pass Packets

  Interconnecting Computers Are Called Routers

  Routers Are The Building Blocks Of The Internet

  The Internet Includes Multiple Types Of Networks

  Routers Can Interconnect WANs And LANs

  The Hierarchical Structure Of The Internet

  Where Packets Travel

  Interconnecting Networks Was Revolutionary

  Summary

  Chapter 14 ISPs: Broadband And Wireless Access

  Introduction

  Internet Service Providers And Fees

  Customer Connections Form The Last Mile

  Leased Circuits Are Expensive

  Dial-up Access Is Inexpensive, But Slow

  Broadband Connections Offer High Speed

  The Important Concept Of Continuous Connectivity

  Instantaneous Access Changes Use

  Modern Technologies Offer Inexpensive Dedicated Access

  Wireless Access Is Available

  Wi-Fi And 3G Wireless Technologies

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 15 IP: Software To Create A Virtual Network

  Introduction

  Protocol: An Agreement For Communication

  Basic Functionality: The Internet Protocol

  IP Software On Every Machine

  Internet Packets Are Called Datagrams

  The Illusion Of A Giant Network

  The Internet’s Internal Structure

  Datagrams Travel In Packets

  Every Computer Is Assigned A Unique Address

  Internet Addresses

  An Odd IP Address Syntax

  IP Addresses Are Not Random

  A Trip Through An Example Internet

  How Fast Is Your Connection?

  Summary

  Chapter 16 TCP: Software For Reliable Communication

  Introduction

  A Packet Switching System Can Be Overrun

  TCP Helps IP Guarantee Delivery

  TCP Provides A Connection Between Computer Programs

  The Magic Of Recovering Lost Datagrams

  TCP Retransmission Is Automatic

  TCP And IP Work Together

  Summary

  Chapter 17 Clients + Servers = Distributed Computing

  Introduction

  Large Computers Use Networks For Input And Output

  Small Computers Use Networks To Interact

  Distributed Computing On The Internet

  A Single Paradigm Explains All Distributed Computing

  Communicating Programs Are Clients Or Servers

  A Server Must Always Run

  Summary

  Chapter 18 Names For Computers

  Introduction

  People Prefer Names To Numbers

  Naming A Computer Can Be Challenging Or Fun

  Computer Names Must Be Unique

  Suffixes On Computer Names

  Names With Many Parts

  Domain Names Outside The US

  Translating A Name To An Equivalent IP Address

  Domain Name System Works Like Directory Assistance

  Computer Name Lookup Is Automatic

  IP Addresses And Domain Names Are Unrelated

  Summary

  Chapter 19 NAT: Sharing An Internet Connection

  Introduction

  High Capacity And Multiple Computers

  It Is Possible To Share A Single IP Address

  A Device For Connection Sharing Is Called A NAT Box

  A NAT Box Acts Like A Miniature ISP

  NAT Changes The Address In Each Datagram

  Computer Software Can Perform The NAT Function

  NAT Can Use A Wireless Network

  Summary

  Chapter 20 Why The Internet Works Well

  Introduction

  The Internet Works Well

  IP Provides Flexibility

  TCP Provides Reliability

  TCP/IP Software Was Engineered For Efficiency

  TCP/IP Research Emphasized Practical Results

  The Formula For Success

  Summary

  PART IV Services Available On The Internet

  Chapter 21 Electronic Mail

  Introduction

  Description Of Functionality

  The Best Of All Worlds

  Each User Has A Mailbox For Email

  Sending An Email Message

  Notification That Email Has Arrived

  Reading An Email Message

  A Browser Can Be Used To Send And Receive Email

  Email Messages Look Like Interoffice Memos

  Email Software Fills In Header Information

  How Email Works

  Using Email From A Personal Computer

  Mailbox Address Format

  Abbreviations Make Email Friendly

  Aliases Permit Arbitrary Abbreviations

  Aliases Shared By All Users Of A Computer System

  Sending To Multiple Recipients

  Mailing List: An Alias for Multiple Recipients

  Public Mailing Lists And Mail Exploders

  Exchanging Email With Non-Internet Sites

  Access To Services Via Email

  Speed, Reliability, And Expectations

  Impact And Significance Of Electronic Mail

  A Convention For Joining A Mailing List

  Chapter 22 Bulletin Board Service (Newsgroups)

  Introduction

  Description Of Functionality

  Many Bulletin Boards With Diverse Topics

  Network News

  Categories

  Obtaining Network News And The Software To Read Articles

  How Network News Appears To A User

  Checking For News Articles

  Reading Network News

  Submission Of An Article

  Moderated Newsgroups

  Size Of Network News

  Impact And Significance Of Newsgroups And Mailing Lists

  Hints And Conventions For Participating In Discussions

  Summary

  Chapter 23 Browsing The World Wide Web

  Introduction

  Description Of Functionality

  Browsing Vs. Information Retrieval

  Early Browsing Services Used Menus

  A Menu Item Can Point To Another Computer

  How A Browser Works

  An Example Point-And-Click Interface

  Combining Menu Items With Text

  The Importance Of Integrated Links

  Embedded Links In Text Are Called Hypertext

  Multimedia

  Video And Audio References Can Be Embedded In Text

  The World Wide Web

  Browser Software Used To Access The Web

  An Example Hypermedia Display

  Control Of A Browser

  External References

  Recording The Location Of Information

  Bookmarks Or Favorites

  How The World Wide Web Works

  A URL Tells A Browser Which Computer To Contact

  A URL Tells A Browser Which Server To Contact

  Use Of The Name www In URLs

  A Browser Provides Access To Multiple Services

  Inside A Browser Program

  Summary

  An Observation About Hypermedia Browsing

  Chapter 24 World Wide Web Documents (HTML)

  Introduction

  Display Hardware Varies

  A Browser Translates And Displays A Web Document

  A Consequence Of The Web Approach

  HTML, The Language Used For Web Documents

  Instructions In A Web Page Control The Output

  A Web Page Is Divided Into Two Main Sections

  Indentation Can Make HTML Readable

  The Body Of A Web Page Can Contain Text

  Indentation Can Make Paragraphs Easier To Find

  A Web Page Can Link To Another Page

  HTML Allows Numbered And Unnumbered Lists

  Images On A Web Page Are Digital

  HTML Allows A Web Page To Include An Image

  Text Can Appear Adjacent To An Image

  Images Can Link To Another Web Page

  Some Browsers Can Stretch Or Shrink Images

  The Background Can Be Controlled

  Other Features Of HTML

  Importance Of HTML

  GUI Tools Help With Web Page Creation

  Summary

  Chapter 25 Advanced Web Technologies (Forms, Frames, Plugins, Java, JavaScript, Flash)

  Introduction

  Conventional Web Pages Are Static

  How A Server Stores Static Web Pages

  Fetching Items One At A Time

  Conventional Web Pages Use The Entire Screen

  A Web Page Can Change Part Of the Screen

  The Web, Advertising, And Frames

  Pop-Ups And Pop-Up Blockers

  Static Documents Have Disadvantages

  Controlling How A Browser Processes Data

  Plugins Allow Variety

  A Server Can Compute A Web Page On Demand

  How Server-Side Scripting Works

  Professional Programmers Build Server Scripts

  Personalized Web Pages

  Personalized Advertisements

  Web Pages Can Interact

  Shopping Carts

  Cookies

  Should You Accept Cookies?

  A Web Page Can Display Simple Animations

  Active Documents Are More Powerful

  Java Is An Active Document Technology

  JavaScript Is An Active Document Technology

  Flash And Real Technologies

  The Importance Of Advanced Web Technologies

  Chapter 26 Group And Personal Web Pages (Wikis And Blogs)

  Introduction

  The Disadvantage Of A Bulletin Board System

  Shared Pages

  Shared Pages Are Called Wikis

  Sharing And Consensus Building

  The Disadvantage Of Wikis

  Wikipedia Is An Experiment

  Should You Trust Wikipedia?

  Publication Of A Personal Diary

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 27 Automated Web Search (Search Engines)

  Introduction

  Description Of Functionality

  Browsing Vs. Automated Searching

  A Search Engine Helps Users Get Started

  A Search Tool Can Help Recover From Loss

  How An Automated Search Service Operates

  Gathering Information In Advance

  Modern Systems Search Web Page Contents

  How A Web Search Appears To A User

  How A Search Engine Returns Results

  Automated Search Services Use String Matching

  The Advantages And Disadvantages Of String Matching

  Automated Search Programs That Use Multiple Keys

  Advanced Services Offer More Sophisticated Matching

  Personalized Search Results

  More Details About How Content Searching Works

  Searches Are Restricted

  Advertising Pays For Searching

  Examples Of Automated Search Services

  Significance Of Automated Web Search

  Chapter 28 Text, Audio, And Video Communication (IM, VoIP)

  Introduction

  Instant Messaging Provides Textual Communication

  Audio And Video Functionality

  Audio And Video Require Special Facilities

  An Audio Clip Resembles An Audio CD

  Real-Time Means No Delay

  Internet Audio In Real-Time

  Radio Programs On The Internet

  Real-Time Audio Transmission Is Called Webcasting

  Internet Telephone Service Is Possible

  Internet Telephone Service Is Known As VoIP

  Audio Teleconferencing

  A Cooperative Document Markup Service

  Marking A Document

  The Participants Discuss And Mark A Document

  Video Teleconferencing

  Video Teleconference Among Groups Of People

  A Combined Audio, Video, Whiteboard, And IM Service

  Summary

  A Personal Note

  Chapter 29 Faxes, File Transfer, And File Sharing (FTP)

  Introduction

  Sending A Fax

  The Internet Can Be Used To Copy Files

  Data Stored In Files

  Copying A File

  FTP Is Invoked From A Browser

  FTP Allows A User To View Directory Contents

  FTP Allows A User To Upload Files

  FTP Transfers Must Be Authorized

  How FTP Works

  Impact And Significance Of FTP

  Peer-To-Peer File Sharing

  Summary

  Chapter 30 Remote Login And Remote Desktops (TELNET)

  Introduction

  Early Computers Used Textual Interfaces

  A Timesharing System Requires User Identification

  Remote Login Resembles Conventional Login

  How Remote Login Works

  Escaping From Remote Login

  The Internet Remote Login Standard Is TELNET

  Remote Access Can Display A Desktop

  How Remote Desktops Operate

  Assessment Of Remote Login And Desktops

  Generality Makes Remote Login And Desktops Powerful

  Remote Access Accommodates Multiple Types Of Computers

  Unexpected Results From Remote Access

  Summary

  Chapter 31 Facilities For Secure Communication

  Introduction

  The Internet Is Unsecure

  Lack Of Security Can Be Important

  Authentication And Privacy Are Primary Problems

  Data Can Be Changed

  Encoding Keeps Messages Private

  Computer Encryption Uses Mathematics

  No Network Is Absolutely Secure

  Encryption Makes Email Private

  Encryption Software Needs A Key

  Two Keys Means Never Having To Trust Anyone

  Secure Email In Practice

  Secure Wireless Networks

  Firewalls Protect Networks From Unwanted Packets

  A Firewall Filters Packets

  Firewalls Guard Against Trojan Horses

  Residential And Individual Firewalls

  Systems Exist To Detect Intrusion

  Service Can Be Denied

  Summary

  Chapter 32 Secure Access From A Distance (VPNs)

  Introduction

  Organizations Grant Employees Special Privileges

  Traveling Employees Lose Privilege

  Telecommuters Do Not Have Privilege

  Dedicated Leased Circuits Allow Secure Telecommuting

  Standard Internet Connections Are Low-Cost

  Can A Technology Combine Advantages?

  A Virtual Private Network Solves The Problem

  How A VPN Works

  The Illusion Of A Direct Connection

  Significance Of VPNs

  Chapter 33 Internet Economics And Electronic Commerce

  Introduction

  Who Pays For The Internet?

  E-commerce Is Big Business

  Security Technology Made E-commerce Possible

  Secure Sockets

  Public Key Encryption Provides Authenticity

  Digital Signatures

  Certificates Contain Public Keys

  What Is Digital Money?

  Digital Cash Is Not Widely Available

  Business And E-commerce

  Chapter 34 The Global Digital Library

  Introduction

  A Cornucopia Of Services

  New Services Appear Regularly

  Flexibility Permits Change

  A Digital Library

  Card Catalogs And Search Tools

  Internet Services Can Be Integrated

  Mr. Dewey, Where Are You?

  Information In The Digital Library

  What Is The Internet?