User:Dan Nessett/Sandboxes/Sandbox 1: Difference between revisions

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The '''Internet''' is a term with many meanings, depending on the context of its use. To the general public, the term is often used synonymously with the [[World Wide Web]] its best-known application. But the internet supports many other applications, such as [[electronic mail]], [[streaming media]], such as internet radio and video, a large percentage of [[telephone traffic]], [[system monitoring]] and [[real-time control] applications, to name but a few. Web browsers are perhaps the most common user interface to the Internet. Web browsers translate human requests to the [[Hypertext Transfer Protocol]] that actually moves the data between the browser and a Web server.
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<td>This is a test of inhibiting second-order transclusion of the speedy delete template.</td>
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<tr style=" border:1px solid #900"><td>'''{{{1|No reason was given.}}}'''</td></tr>
<tr style=" border:1px solid #900"><td>{{{2|Check the history to see who requested this.}}}</td></tr>
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<includeonly>[[Category:Templates/Deprecated]]#subst:{{{1|1}}}</includeonly>
But in one respect the '''Internet''' is similar to an iceberg. The vast majority of it is out of sight. While [[distributed applications]] are how users interact with internet services, their provision requires a vast plethora of technologies visible only to the enterprises that
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The Internet itself has no direct human interfaces; every user-visible function must go through a program resident on a client or server computer. There are literally hundreds of different [[protocol (computer)|protocols]], applications and services that run over the Internet.  [[Virtual private network]]s interconnecting the parts of individual enterprises, or sets of cooperating enterprises, overlay the Internet. A wide range of interconnected networks using the same protocols as the public Internet, but isolated from it, provide services ranging from passing orders to launch [[nuclear weapon]]s, authorizing credit card purchases, collecting intelligence information, controlling the electric power grid (see [[System Control And Data Acquisition]]), [[telemedicine]] such as transferring medical images and even allowing remote surgery, etc. ]]

Revision as of 15:59, 15 September 2009

The Internet is a term with many meanings, depending on the context of its use. To the general public, the term is often used synonymously with the World Wide Web its best-known application. But the internet supports many other applications, such as electronic mail, streaming media, such as internet radio and video, a large percentage of telephone traffic, system monitoring and [[real-time control] applications, to name but a few. Web browsers are perhaps the most common user interface to the Internet. Web browsers translate human requests to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol that actually moves the data between the browser and a Web server.

But in one respect the Internet is similar to an iceberg. The vast majority of it is out of sight. While distributed applications are how users interact with internet services, their provision requires a vast plethora of technologies visible only to the enterprises that

The Internet itself has no direct human interfaces; every user-visible function must go through a program resident on a client or server computer. There are literally hundreds of different protocols, applications and services that run over the Internet. Virtual private networks interconnecting the parts of individual enterprises, or sets of cooperating enterprises, overlay the Internet. A wide range of interconnected networks using the same protocols as the public Internet, but isolated from it, provide services ranging from passing orders to launch nuclear weapons, authorizing credit card purchases, collecting intelligence information, controlling the electric power grid (see System Control And Data Acquisition), telemedicine such as transferring medical images and even allowing remote surgery, etc. ]]