Pages

Sabtu, 09 Juli 2011

Internet 101

Internet 101
Come and discover how the Internet works. Find out where you can get great software. Discover the fastest way to connect to the Internet. Learn the secrets of search engines.  Have your questions answered and problems solved.  We are the world’s most popular guide to the Internet and currently read in 148 countries!   We’ve been serving the internet community since 1997!

Internet 101 was created for those who want to know just the basics. This guide will provide you with enough knowledge to have fun on the Internet, yet will not bore you with too many details.
Think of this as a set of instructions…for people who don’t like to read instructions!

The Internet has been around for about 25 years. Here are ten of the events that got us where we are today:
The World Wide Web
Tim Berners-Lee created user-friendly “Web pages” that could travel over the Internet, a network built to shuttle research between universities. The world logged on: 747 million adults in January.
E-mail
Tech’s answer to the Pony Express . Programs such as 1988’s Eudora made it easy to use. In-boxes have been filling up ever since. Nearly 97 billion e-mails are sent each day.
VoIP
The rising buzzword in the Internet community, nowadays, is VoIP phone. What does it mean? How does it affect your life or business? VoIP stands for Voice over Internet Protocol, and that means a phone service that uses broadband Internet connectivity to dial and connect.
AOL
AOL turned people on to Web portals, chat rooms and instant messaging. Early subscribers paid by the hour. AOL once boasted 35 million subscribers. It bought Time Warner for $106 billion in 2001.
Mosaic/Netscape
Created by Marc Andreessen and others, Mosaic was the first widely-used multimedia Web browser. Spin-off Netscape Navigator ruled the ‘90s until Microsoft’s Internet Explorer took off around ‘98.
Yahoo!
Stanford University graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo created this popular Web portal in 1994. It remains a favorite for email, photo sharing (it owns Flickr) and other services.
eBay
Thanks to eBay, we can all now buy and sell almost anything (skip the body parts). eBay has 230 million customers worldwide who engage in 100 million auctions at any given time.
Amazon.com
Jeff Bezos’ baby began as an always-in-stock book seller. It survived the tech bubble and now is the definitive big box online store. It was the second most-visited online retailer in December, after eBay.
Instant Messaging
LOL! Web surfers began to “laugh out loud” and BRB (“be right back”) in the mid-‘90s, with the launch of ICQ and AOL Instant Messenger. Millions use it to swap messages and photos, even telephone pals.
Broadband
The answer to the drip-drip-drip of dial-up, high-speed Internet service fuels online entertainment. About 78% of home Internet users in the U.S. have broadband, up from less than 1% in 1998.  Comcast high speed internet allows you to do today what you only dreamed of doing just a few years ago and all from the comfort of home.