Lesson 1
Lesson 1
Information Age
- Typically described by the change from traditional industry to an economy based
Computerization.
Internet Revolution
- The Internet had its roots during the 1960's as a project of the United States
government's Department of Defense, to create a non-centralized network.
- This project was called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network),
created by the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency established in 1969 to
provide a secure and survivable communications network for organizations engaged in
defense-related research.
- The standard protocol was invented in 1977 and was called TCP/IP (Transmission
Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). TCP/IP allowed users to link various branches of
other complex networks directly to the ARPANET, which soon came to be called the
Internet.
HTTP - (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) is the set of rules for transferring files (text,
graphic images, sound, video, and other multimedia files) on the World Wide Web.
Hypertext is any text that can link to documents in other locations. Photos and other
images, sounds, and video with links are called hypermedia.
1993 - 1995, the World Wide Web (www, or the Web), a user-friendly
information-sharing network system, quietly came into being and began to spread.
The Internet age began in the 1960s, when computer specialists in Europe began to
exchange information from a main computer to a remote terminal by breaking down
data into small packets of information that could be reassembled at the receiving end.
The system was called packet-switching.
In 1993, Mosaic, a browser that adapted the graphics, familiar icons (picture symbols),
and point-and-click methods, became available.
- A year later, one of Mosaic's creators devised Netscape Navigator, a highly
successful Web browser that gave users more comfortable Web access.
Yahoo! Inc. was nothing more than a Web search index. By 1999, so many advertisers
and investors had jumped on the Yahoo! bandwagon, it had become a major media
company worth tens of billions of dollars. The stock of online auction house eBay, one
of a growing number of e-commerce companies, increased 2,000 percent in value in
less than a year when it went public in 1998.
Amazon.com, 1995, a seller of books and other merchandise online, was valued in the
multibillions long before it made its first annual profit in 2004.
WEB 1.0
- The first iteration of the web represents the web 1.0, which, according to Berners-Lee,
is the “read-only web.”
- The early web allowed us to search for information and read it. There was very little in
the way of user interaction or content generation.
After the dot-com bubble burst, a second wave of Web industries arose, which came to
be known as Web 2.0. The leader among them was a successful search engine
called Google.
Search engines are software programs that help users locate Web sites. They use
programs, called “spiders” or “robots,” that go out and collect information, which is then
stored and indexed in the search engine's Web site databases.)
Blogs had emerged. A blog (derived from “Web log”) is an online commentary written
by a nonprofessional writer in journal style that allows readers to respond.
MySpace, a social networking Web site with an estimated 154 million members.
YouTube, a Web site on which users can display videos.
Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia written and edited by its readers, grew into a
several-million-article project.
Yahoo – 1994, is an Internet portal that incorporates a search engine and a directory of
World Wide Web sites; chat groups, instant messaging, and e-mail.
Google - 1998 (Larry Page and Sergey Brin), search for information about (someone or
something) on the Internet using the search engine.
Skype – 2003, a voice over Internet Protocol software application used for voice, video
and instant messaging communications.
Youtube - 2004 (Chad Harley and Steve Chen), is a video sharing service that allows
users to watch videos posted by other users and upload videos of their own.
Facebook - 2004 is an online social networking website where people can create
profiles, share information such as photos and quotes about themselves, and respond
or link to the information posted by others. Created by Mark Zuckerberg.
Twitter - created by Norah Glass, Jack Dorsey, Bizstone and Evan Williams in 2006 a
netwoking website where people post and inter act.
Messenger - developed as facebook chat in 2008 but changed its messaging service in
2010.
Mobile Phone
- is a portable telephone that can make and receive calls over a radio frequency link
while the user is moving within a telephone service area.
Laptop
- a portable microcomputer having its main components (such as processor, keyboard,
and display screen) integrated into a single unit capable of battery-powered operation
Mobile phones offering only those capabilities are known as feature phones; mobile
phones which offer greatly advanced computing capabilities are referred to as
smartphones.