Term
|
Description
|
| Attachment |
A file attached to an e-mail or bulletin
board message.
|
| Bookmark |
A bookmark acts like a marker to a
website. Internet Explorer calls a bookmark a
"Favorite". Netscape calls a bookmark a
"Bookmark". Either way a bookmark will allow you to
revisit a web page at a later date without having to remember
the URL to the page.
|
| Browser |
A browser, or web browser, is a program
that allows people to interface to the World Wide Web. It
interprets HTML code, text, images, hypertext links, java
applets, etc. allowing you to view web sites and move from one
site to another. The two most popular browsers are
Netscape Communicator and Microsoft Internet Explorer.
|
| Bulletin
Board |
A series of messages that have been
posted as replies to each other. A bulletin board typically
contains many threads covering different subjects. By reading
each message in a thread, one after the other, you can see how
the discussion has evolved.
|
| Byte |
A single computer word, generally eight
bits.
|
| Cache |
Computers have many different types of
cache, but they all serve the same purpose. Cache stores
information that was used recently. For example, a web
browser will use a cache to store pages, images, sounds, etc.
of web sites you visit on your hard drive. This will
allow your computer to reload the web page information from
your hard drive rather than downloading the information again
from the website when you revisit the site. Loading the
information from your hard drive will allow the web page to be
displayed faster; this usually speeds up web browsing.
Your computer also uses disk caching,
which stores information you have recently read from your hard
disk in the computer's RAM. Since accessing RAM is much faster
than reading data off the hard disk, this helps speed up
common functions on your computer. One other type of cache is
a processor cache, which stores small amounts of information.
This helps make the processing of common instructions much
more efficient, thereby speeding up computing time.
|
| Chat |
Real-time communication between two
people via computer. Once a chat has been initiated, either
person can enter text by typing on the keyboard, and the
entered text will appear on the other person's monitor.
|
| CPU |
"Central Processing Unit".
The component of a computer in which data processing takes
place.
|
| Cut |
To remove an object from a document and
place it in a temporary storage area. In word processing, for
example, cut means to move a section of text from a
document to a temporary area.
|
| Default |
This term is used to describe a preset
value for some option in a computer program.
|
| Download |
The process of sending information to
your computer from the internet or from another computer.
|
| E-Mail |
Electronic Mail
|
| FAQ |
Frequently Asked Questions.
Created to help answer a majority of questions that someone
may have when coming to a web site the first time.
|
| Firewall |
A firewall is used to protect a
networked server from damage by those who log in to it. This
can either be a computer equipped with security features,
software protection, or both. A firewall allows only certain
messages from the Internet to flow in and out of the internal
network.
|
| Floppy
Disk |
Short for floppy disk drive, a disk
drive that can read and write to floppy disks.
|
| FTP |
"File Transfer Protocal".
A protocol that allows you to move files from a distant
computer to a local computer using a network like the
Internet.
|
| GIF |
Stands for Graphics Interchange
Format. This is a type of graphic image commonly
used in web pages.
|
| Hard
Drive |
The mechanism that reads and writes data
on a hard drive.
|
| Homepage |
The starting point or main page of a
website. This page usually has information about the
site and links to other pages within the site
|
| HTML |
"Hyper-Text Markup
Language." HTML code is based on a list of tags
that describe the format and what is displayed on web pages
|
| HTTP |
"HyperText Transfer
Protocol." It is the protocol used to transfer
data over the World Wide Web.
|
| Internet |
Countless networks and computers all
over the world that allow millions of people to share
information. This information is transferred all over
the world through a series of lines collectively called the
Internet Backbone.
|
| IP |
"Internet Protocol."
This allows for data to be transferred between systems over
the Internet. It provides a standard set of rules for sending
and receiving data via the Internet.
|
| IP
Address |
A code made up of numbers that is
separated by 4 dots that identifies a particular computer on
the Internet. Every computer, whether it be a web server
or the computer you're using right now, requires an IP address
to connect to the Internet.
|
| ISP |
"Internet Service Provider"
|
| Java |
Java is a computer programming language
developed by Sun Microsystems.
|
| JPG |
Short for Joint Photographic
Experts Group. Type of Graphic Image
Format. Commonly used in Web Pages.
|
| Listserv |
An e-mail program that allows multiple
computer users to connect onto a single system, creating an
on-line discussion.
|
| Login |
Username or a code that identifies you
to a certain server. It is often used in conjunction with a
password to verify who is accessing the server.
|
| MB |
Short for megabyte (1,000,000 or
1,048,576 bytes, depending on the context).
|
| Netiquette |
Netiquette, or net etiquette, refers to
etiquette on the Internet. Based on the Golden Rule, good
netiquette is basically not doing anything online that will
annoy or frustrate other people. Three areas where good
netiquette is highly stressed are e-mail, online chat, and
newsgroups.
|
| Netscape |
An example of browser software that
allows you to design a home page and to browse links on the
Internet.
|
| Internet
Explorer |
An example of browser software that
allows to browse links on the Internet.
|
| Operating
System |
Usually referred to as the
"OS", this is the software that actually
"talks" with computer's hardware. Without an
operating system, all software programs would be useless. The
OS is what allocates memory, processes tasks, accesses disks
and peripherials, and acts as the user interface.
|
| Paste |
To copy an object from a temporary
storage area on your computer to a file. In word processing,
text is moved from one place to another by cutting and
pasting.
|
| Upload |
The process of sending information from
your computer to the internet or to another computer.
|
| User |
A person who uses a computer
|
| Server |
A computer with a special service
function on a network, generally receiving and connecting
incoming information traffic
|
| WebCT |
A tool that facilitates the creation of
sophisticated World Wide Web-based educational environments by
non-technical users. It can be used to create entire
on-line courses, or to simply publish materials that
supplement existing courses.
|
| Web
Page |
Web pages are what make up the World
Wide Web. These documents are written in HTML (hypertext
markup language) and are translated by your Web browser.
|
| Web
Site |
A collection of related, interlinked Web
Pages.
|
| WWW |
A graphical hypertext-based Internet
tool that provides access to web pages created by individuals,
businesses, and other organizations.
|
| Zip
Drive |
A high-capacity floppy disk drive
developed by Iomega Corporation. Zip disks are slightly larger
than conventional floppy disks and about twice as thick. They
can hold 100 or 250 MB of data.
|