Tuesday, December 24, 2013

The Internet



The Internet is composed of many interconnected computer networks. Each network may links tens, hundreads, or even thousand of computers, enabling them to share information with one another and to share computional resources such as powerful supercomputer and data bases of information. The has made possible for people all over the world to communicate with one another effectively and inexpensively. Unlike traditional broadcasting media, such as radio and television, the Internet does not have a centralized distribution system. Instead, an individual who has Internet access can communicate directly with anyone else on the Internet, make information available to others, find information provided by others, or sell products with a minimum overhead cost.

 The Internet has brought new opportunities to government, business, and education. Governments use the  Internet for internal communication, distribution of information, and automated tax processing. In addition to offering goods and services online to customers, businesses use the Internet to interact with other businesses. Many individuals use the Internet for communicating through eletronic mail (e-mail), for news and research information, shopping, paying bills, online banking. Educational institutions use the Internet for research and to deliver courses material to students.


 Use of the Internet has grown termendously since its inception. The Internet's success arises from its flexibility. Instead of restricting component networks to a particular manufacturer or particular type, Internet technology allows interconnection of any kind of computr network No network is too large or too small, too ast or too slow to be interconnected. Thus, the Internet includes inexpensive networks that can only connect a few computers within a single room as well as expensive networks that can span a continent and connect thousands of computers.


 Internet service providers (ISPs) provide Internet access to customers, usually for a monthly fee. A customers who subscribes to an ISP's service uses the ISP's network to access the Internet. Because ISPs offer their services to the general public, the networks they operate are known as public access networks. In the United States, as in many countries ISPs are private companies; in countries where telephone service is a government-regulated monopoly, the government often controls ISPs.


 An organization that has many computers usually owns and operates a private network, called an inranet, which connects all the computers within the organization. To provide Internet sevice, the organization. To provide Internet service, the organizations connects its intranet to the Internet. Unlike public access networks, intranet are restricted to provide security. Only authorized computers at the organization can connect te the intranet, and the organization restricts communication between the intranet and the global Internet. The restrictions allow computers inside the organization to exchange information but keep the information confidential end protected from outsiders.


 The Internet has doubled in size every 9 to 14 months since it began in the late 1970s. In 1981 only 213 computers were connected to the Internet. By 2000 the number had grown to more than 100 million. The current number of people who use the Internet can only be estimated. One survey found that there were 61 million Interner users worldwide at the end of 1996, 148 million at the end of 1998, and 407 million by the end of 2000. Today, the number of Internet users is estimated to be more than 800 million worldwide!