-A simple explanation of web and Internet terminology -
When investigating or using web services there's usually a lot of technical language. For those wishing to learn more, we have provided a quick overview of commonly used terms and their definition. We hope you find this list helpfull.
Technical words explained in non-technical terms:
Bandwidth:
The greater the bandwidth the more information that can be transferred at one time. It’s a bit like your garden hose – the fatter the hose the more water can flow through it at any one time. The term bandwidth also broadly includes throughput, meaning the amount of information sent.
Broadband:
More and more people are getting broadband. In a nutshell it’s like getting a large hose pipe (see bandwidth). It makes using the Internet much faster than with a standard dial up modem. For example, downloading a document (such as a Word file) from the Internet may take 2 minutes on a normal dialup modem but only 12 seconds on a broadband connection. Dialup modems normally use your phone line, preventing voice calls whenever you are on the Internet, whereas broadband connections allow you to use your phone simultaneously.
Browser:
Software for viewing web pages. Browsers (or Internet Browsers) are often free, either to download or from CDs. The most popular browser is made by Microsoft and called Internet Explorer. If you have a PC it will already be on your computer.
Cyberspace:
A term coined by novelist William Gibson to refer to a near-future computer network where users mentally travel through matrices of information. The term is now used to describe the Internet and other computer networks.
Dial up Modem:
Currently the most widespread form of Internet connection for the home user. This is a connection from your computer using a modem over standard telephone lines. A modem is simply a device to let your computer talk over the phone line.
Download:
The process of copying a file from the Internet onto your computer. For example, you can download a Word file. When you disconnect from the Internet you can still access the downloaded Word file as it is now copied to your computer.
Email:
Similar to normal postal mail - there is a ‘from address’ and a ‘to address’ but rather than a postman delivering the mail everything is handled electronically.
FAQ:
Acronym for Frequently Asked Questions.
Firewall:
Used to stop unwanted access to either a computer or a network. If you are using a PC, particularly if you are using broadband we recommend you consider installing the free version of ZoneAlarm.
FTP:
Acronym for File Transfer Protocol. A method of transferring files from one computer to another. A web developer would use FTP to transfer your website from his local computer to the hosting company's server.
GIF:
Acronym for Graphic Interchange Format. Images come in a variety of formats (similarly, movies can come as DVDs or VHS tapes). GIF is one of the main image formats for use on the web. GIF is particularly good for logos and line drawings. Photographs are better as JPEGs (.jpg). Other image types used are PNG, TIFF, etc.
Home Page:
Home Page can either refer to the first web page you come to at a website (e.g. the WELCOME page) or the document displayed when you first open your browser. Also known as the Landing Page.
HTML:
Acronym for HyperText Markup Language. Most web pages are written in a language called HTML. To learn a little HTML is simple. To learn to write HTML takes a lot of hard work.
Hyperlinks
See links.
Internet:
Lots of computers connected together by wires, satellites and radio links etc. Whenever you are surfing the web the computer you are using is connected to the Internet.
JPEG:
Acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group. One of the main image formats for use on the web. Photographs are normally best stored as JPEG images for use on the web. (See GIF).
Links:
Also known as hyperlinks. Connects you from where you are on the web to somewhere else. For example, it may connect you to another website or to a person’s email address etc. When you click on a menu and it opens another page you have clicked a link.
QuickTime:
QuickTime is a movie format developed by Apple. You can download the free QuickTime viewer at Apple's website.
URL:
Acronym for Uniform Resource Locator. Addressing system used in the World Wide Web and other Internet resources. An address such as "http://www.omegawebsolution.com/" is a URL. Also known as a ‘web address’.
Virus:
A program that copies itself across the Internet, especially via email (or by other means, e.g. malicious code embeded in a website). These programs can do annoying or nasty things to your computer. If you use the Internet you should use a virus killer program. We have been pleased with the protection received from these freely available virus killers: AVG anti-virus and AVAST anti-virus (do a Google search for these terms).
Web:
Also known as World Wide Web. Often used informally to mean the collection of computers connected to the Internet. If you had a large map and put a marker pin in it for every computer on the Internet then drew a line (with a very fine pencil) between every point you would soon see why it is called the web. (Think of a spider’s web.)
Webmaster:
Person in charge of running a website.
Web Page:
A single page on the web. A collection of pages is referred to as a website.
Web Server:
A computer permanently connected to the Internet which runs a website. When a visitor requests a page the web server sends it to them.
Website:
Also written ‘web site’. One or more web pages. Just like a book has pages with text and pictures, so can a site.
World Wide Web:
See web.
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