Laboratory Assignment
Find an appropriate email program. Your instructor will show you
which ones are available on your system
Change your password. Be careful that your password cannot be easily guessed.
Get the email addresses of five of your classmates. Add them to the
address book of your email program. Send them each an email
Subscribe to the class mailing list. Your instructor will tell you
the controlling program address as well as the list address.
Use a newsgroup reader to find answers to the following questions: Write down enough to prove you have found an answer. You will email
it to the class list later.
- Find a joke
- Tell about a rumor you found
- Anything interesting for sale lately?
Send a short letter to the class mailing list. In the subject area,
put your name and the section number of the class. Write your answers
to the newsgroup questions in the message area of the test. Your
instructor will grade the emails
Vocabulary / Main Concepts
- Protocols: A set of agreements about how information will be transferred among
Internet - connected computers
- TCPIP: Transfer control protocol / Internet protocol
The underlying protocol of the internet.
- Telnet: A protocol that allows one computer to be a terminal of another. Both
computers must have active Internet conne ctions to use Telnet.
- FTP: File Transfer Protocol
A protocol for sharing files between internet - connected computers.
- HTTP: Hypertext transfer protocol
The protocol which makes the world wide web possible
- DNS: Domain Name System (or Server) The system of hierarchical organization that gives names to computers
and domains on the internet.
- IP Number: The number assigned to each computer on the Internet. IP numbers are
used much like zip codes to help each packet find the right recipient.
- Domain Names: A system of names used to represent IP numbers. Domain names are
easier to remember than IP numbers.
- UserID: The name each individual is given on his / her LAN or mainframe.
- LAN: Local Area Network
A number of personal computers connected by cables and software.
- Routers: Specialized computers which handle TCPIP packets. Routers hand off
the messages to other routers.
- The Internet Backbone: A series of high-speed computers and cables designed to facillitate
Internet communication throughout the world. In the US, the NSF
backbone is the Internet backbone.
- Client - Server approach: A description of the way the Internet handles messages.
- Client: Software that is designed to ask for information from a server
program. Most users use only client software.
- Server: Hardware or software that is set up to distribute information to
clients all over the world.
- Direct connection: A computer that has a direct line to a router. Very expensive, but
gives great control. Generally only servers have direct connections.
- Dial - In Connection: Uses a communication to make one computer act as a terminal of the
other. The terminal computer does not exist as far as the internet is
concerned.
- SLIP - PPP: Serial Line Internet Protocol - Point to Point
Protocol. Protocols which allow the server to 'loan out' temporary IP
numbers to clients.
- ISP: Internet Service Providers
Usually small businesses that rent out space on computers with a
direct connection.
- Email Address: The address used to find a particular person on the Internet. Combines the userid with the domain name of their system with an @ sign.
- Talk: A protocol that allows two users to type simultaneously in real - time.
- Chat: A program or protocol that allows many people to type simultaneously
in the same conversation.
- Mailing Lists: A protocol which uses programs such as majordomo or listserv to
automate email to multiple parties.
- Newsgroups: A protocol or program that allows users to exchange messages world
wide. Newsgroups are a bit more formal than mailing lists.
Andy Harris, aharris@klingon.cs.iupui.edu