You must have heard of the Internet, with such
publicity in the newspapers. You must have
wondered what this computer-related phenomenon
is, and how you could use it. Now, as you
already have this site, the answers to your
questions about internet are close at hand.
Here are some of the ways the internet can be
useful to you.
I
Exchange E-mail with any of the tens of
millions of people with E-mail addresses.
There are estimates that about 40 million
people are on the internet.
II
Search for, retrieve, and read literally
millions of files stored computers
throughout the world.
III
Search for and bring to your computer
shareware, freeware and commercial software.
IV
Search databases of governments, individuals
and organizations for files on tens of
thousands of topics.
V
Join specific topic-oriented discussion
groups ( known as Newsgroups, about 15000 to
20000 of them are there)
VI
Send and receive program data files such as
desktop publishing files, spreadsheets, CAD
files or word processor files, which you or
the received can immediately start to work
on.
VII
Send or receive sound, animation and picture
files from very distant places.
VIII
Communicate in real time, with others
connected to the internet.
IX
Browse through resources of private or
public information services that are on the
internet.
X
Set up a site with information about your
company’s products and services.
XI
Browse and search “Catalogs” of goods and
services, and purchased and shopped on line.
XII
Conduct test marketing.
XIII
Distribute/read electronic publications.
XIV
Sell products and services.
The word internet
flashes many images upon the canvas of the mind. The dominant one may be
hundreds or thousands of computers and computer networks connected with each
other, exchanging information. This is the hardware aspect of internet. Its
application aspect is the multitude of different services internet offers
e.g. E-mail and others. Listed and discussed in detail on next pages in this
site. Yet another image is that of everyone doing their own thing.
Governments have attempted to control and legislate it. But have failed.
Strangely, internet is
the product of military undertaking. The Pentagon’s Advanced Research
Project Agency ( ARPA ) funded its creation in 1969, as ARPAnet. The initial
intention was simple: to develop a geographically dispersed, reliable
communication network for military use that would not be disrupted in case
of partial destruction from a nuclear attack. That aim was accomplished by
splitting the data being transmitted into small packets, which can take
different routes to their destination. The “Packet-Switched” network can
resist a nuclear attack in that the packets can take a different route if
one route is knocked off. This main feature of internet technology also
makes it almost impossible to eavesdrop on the messages.
The procedure
developed for interconnecting ARPAnet computers and communicating the data
was called TCP/IP, an acronym for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol. ARPAnet allowed engineers and scientists working on military
contracts all over America to share computers and computers resources. As a
second thought, the computer scientists developed a way to exchange
messages. This feature, “E-mail”, turned the network into a new
communication link. The ARPAnet was first confined to organizations and
individuals having US government security clearance and working on
government contracts. It soon merged with a non governmental, parallel
academic network called Usenet News, launched in 1979, which grew and
eventually became known as the Internet. In the late 1980s the American
government, through its agency the National Science Foundation (NSF), set up
five supercomputers centers, which became the main nodes of the internet, to
which the university and research lab networks became connected.
The number of
computers connected to internet has been growing exponentially, in 1983
there were less than 500 “host” computers, mostly government laboratories
and academic computer science departments. The rest of the academic
community got a whiff of its information exchanging ability, and by 1987
there were about 30,000 host computers at different universities and
research labs. By 1995 this number had increased to 5 million hosts.
In the early 1980s,
using the internet was still difficult. However, its power was obvious.
There was no other method to connect up universities and research labs
around the world which was so fast, convenient and flexible, so the internet
users at universities came up with software to participate in discussion
over the network. They created document and software libraries on the
network, which accessible to all users, during this period; the internet
remained within the narrow confines of the academic and research lab world.
In 1890s another
computer-related event happened – the personal computer became very popular.
Prior to that, businesses used either a minicomputer or a mainframe. But now
they went in a very big way to micro computers, which are known as desktop
computers, personal computers, or PCs. These were stand-alone machines that
lacked the capability of sharing data and resources. To remedy that
shortcoming, the concept of Local Area Network (LAN) became important. For
large companies, Wide Area Networks (WANs) also came into being, with these
in place, E-mail became a means of daily communications.
With the prices of PCs
coming down, more and more individuals also had computers. There was a
demand by these people to connect up their machines with other machines. In
response to that demand, on line services like Telnet and CompuServe came
into being for a fee, individuals could connect up to them and communicate
with other users on the same service, as well as use their repository of
information and software, which people could download. Further, along with
online services came the concept of the Bulletin Board Service (BBS) which
is individuals connecting up to another computer in their vicinity and
exchanging information and sharing software, etc.
Initially these
private networks, both corporate as well as the commercial had different
hardware and software platforms and could not talk to each other, but they
quickly, TCP/IP came to be used by them. Interconnection of these networks,
BBS communities and individuals PCs in homes and offices by adoption of the
Internet technology, TCP/IP gave birth to the Internet as we know it today.
All that the required to connect any network or computer up with the
internet, is the capability to use TCP/IP for exchanging information. This
is how the internet became the Network of Networks.
During its evolution,
the internet was supported and controlled to a greater or lesser degree by
American government agencies, first ARPA and the NSF, but now it has become
a diversified, in some sense uncontrollable, global entity. Its nodes are
supported by diverse sources. In the 1980s ARPA was recognized, its funding
was cut, and the American defense networks were mostly detached from the
internet. Its funding continued through the NSF and until recently, the NSF
paid for connecting the computers of academic institutions and government
agencies everywhere in the USA to the Internet. Slowly, the NSF permitted
commercial networks to be connected to the internet, initially for
educational and research purposes, while forbidding primarily commercial
use. This started the rapid growth of internet. Gradually, commercial use
increased as the restrictions were eased. In 1995 companies passed
universities as main users. In April 1995 NSF moved out of the scene, and
today the American government has no part in running and maintaining the
internet. It is now self-sustaining.
Two other important
developments underlie the present explosive growth of the internet. The
first took place at CERN the European high energy physics lab near Geneva.
There, in 1990 physicists developed software for publishing, searching, and
accessing information on the internet, as a way for scientists to share
documents with their colleagues at large. This came to be known as the WORLD
WIDE WEB. (WWW)
The second occurred at
the University of Illinois, where a young student named Marc Andreessen
developed a graphical browser called MOSAIC, to access information from the
WWW. These two developments have catapulted internet from the laboratory to
the mainstream of life.
If you have asked how
the internet works, chances are that you might say since it is a global
computer network. It is run by some central organization called internet.
Who collects the fee for your use, and if you want to put up any
information, you will have to make arrangements with them. If you said that,
you would have been dead wrong.
All the computers and
wires that make up the thousands of smaller networks connected by the
internet, work because they follow a simple rule, TCP/IP. TCP/IP says simply
that all data shall be broken up into small packets, and that the first part
of each packet has the address where the packet is meant to go. That is
about it. How it should work is not laid down in a master plan. There is no
central computer or authority. Instead of having the data go to a central
computer and then to its destination, with internet, the data has many ways
to get from one point to another, over the web of computers.
For transaction
hardware, the internet is dependent on the existing infrastructure developed
by long-haul telephone companies and other telecommunication companies.
Internet service providers lease data form the telephone networks and have
dedicated computers at the end points or nodes. These rely on the
distributed intelligence of networking equipment known as “Routers” thus
bypassing the telephone company’s expensive switching computers, while using
their transmission lines.
All the content of
internet is held by computers known as the “Servers” which are owned by
organizations and companies, e.g. University of Kansas, Microsoft etc. who
want to distribute the information.
When request is made
of these servers for the information, they bundle the requested information
in small packets, with address as to where it is to be sent, and send them
down to the nearest connection to the internet. When they arrive at the
internet, the packets are read by the router, which is nothing more than a
traffic cop, and sent down in the same general direction as the address. A
similar thing happens at the next junction on the internet. This goes on
till the packet is delivered to the right address, where is put together
again with other packets, to make up the original information.
Say for example you are sending a message from Jalandhar to Los Angeles, USA
to a server named abc.org. The message with be broken up into packets of
approximately 1500 bytes, and some may travel from your ISP (Internet
service provider) e.g. VSNL here to the MCI router in the US, some may
travel to Chandhigarh and then to the MCI router, and so forth. There is no
predetermined path and even individuals packets of the same message may
follow different paths. It all depends on the traffic at the node, at that
moment in time. As the packets reach abc.org, they are all put together as
in the original message and delivered to the given address.
In order to accomplish
the task of messaging across a network, computers use a networking protocol.
Taking the analogy of diplomacy, the relations and interactions between the
representatives of different countries follow a set of rules laid down by
tradition and treaty, which is called diplomatic protocol. Similarly all
computers wanting to talk to each other have no conform to a standard set of
rules defined in the networking protocol. This enables different types of
computers running different types of operating system to communicate
efficiently. The de-facto standard today is TCP/IP (Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol). All this is accomplished by dedicated but fast
computers known as routers that work in unison.
Every organization has
its own network and every individual user, his own system and setup. What
kind, does not matter as long as they talk the same protocol to the external
world.
In order to use TCP/IP
for transferring data from the computer to another, an addressing system has
to be in place. When the number of computers on the internet was small, this
was not a problem, but now with 5 million hosts it is a serious matter, how
does one assign and keep track of all the unique numbers assigned to each
computer, so that every other computer known its existence and sends data to
it? All this information cannot reside on just one computer and be accessed
every day by all the other computers to update their address books. The
Domain Name System (DNS) was developed to solve this problem.
DNS is a distributed
database. This allows local control of the overall database, and yet the
data in each small segment is available across the entire network.
Other than the
distributed nature of the domains, the other main attribute of this system
is its hierarchical nature. This allows responsibility for maintaining a
domain to be distributed and also allows for the information of the hosts to
reside on different computers.
Since internet was
conceived and developed in the USA, Americans defined the top level domains.
Initially these were designated as follows
.edu Education Organizations (University,
School etc.)
.gov Government Organizations (Non Military)
.mil Military (Army, Navy etc.)
.net Network resources e.g. Internet
Service Provider
.org other organization
Initially, the success of internet was not
anticipated and hence no provision was made to
include other countries. Now because of the
other whelming a global success of the internet,
new top level domains are reserved, but not
necessarily created, to correspond to individual
countries, these national domain names follow an
existing international official standard of two
letter abbreviations for every country in the
world.
An example of other countries represented with
domains include:-
.in INDIA
.uk United Kingdom
.au Australia
.us United States of America
.ca Canada
.fr France
.jp Japan
We have given below the graphical representation
of the original top level domains in the USA and
the modified inclusion of countries in the top
level domains. This primary domain list is
maintained by InterNIC, one of the several
loosely-knit voluntary organizations that
oversee various aspects of the internet.
Let us discuss our top
level domain “in” and it sub domains, shown in
the below picture. This top level domain is
maintained by the National Center for Software
Technology (NCST), as they were the first
internet node in India.
This scheme distributes
the responsibility of keeping track all the new
additions of computers to the internet. Within
each category or hierarchy, this is done by the
designated domain administrator or authority.
For example, under the sub-domain “net” is the
sub-domain “vsnl” (India’s International trunk
carrier and Gateway to the world & most famous
Internet Service Provider), which is responsible
for all the hosts they may have e.g. giasbma,
giasd101, giasc101, etc. VSNL comes under “net”
because they are network service provider. The
server or host on which our terminal accounts
reside is “giasbm01” under “VSNL”. An example of
a full internet address under this arrangement
is:
reading from left to right, this is the mail
address for the user knows as dgrgoutam, on the
server called giasbm01. This server is in the
organizational sub-domain vsnl.net. this
organization is located in the national domain
“in” (INDIA)
India Internet History and status.
Before the appearance
of VSNL’s GIAS, internet had been in India for many years in the form of
ERNET. However, it was not possible for many people to get access to it, as
it was mean for only the educational and research communities. This followed
the policy laid down by the American internet manager NSF, at that time.
EDUCTIONAL RESEARCH NETWORK (ERNET)
Internet in India was
established almost 19 years ago, as ERNET. It was a joint undertaking of the
department of electronics (DOE) of the Government of India, and the United
Nations Development Program (UNDP), which provides technical assistance to
developing nations. ERNET is one of the most successful operations that UNDP
has funded. It established for India the idea that we can participate in the
internet. Currently ERNET operates many nodes and has a 64 Kbps link to USA
via Mumbai.
All major nodes of
ERNET are connected to each other using 9600 bps leased lines. These lines
are being upgraded to 64 Kbps links. Over 200 academic and R&D groups
exchange email with each other using ERNET. Over 8000 scientists and
technologists have access to ERNET facilities, international access is
provided over a 64 Kbps leased line, form NCST, Mumbai to USA. Plans for
ERNET include the creation of a satellite communication system to enable
ERNET to reach locations which do not have good data communication links.
GATEWAY INTERNET ACCESS SERVICE (GIAS)
On August 15th, 1995
Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited (VSNL) – India’s International trunk carrier
and Gateway to the World—launched the Gateway Internet Access Service (GIAS)
for the time on commercial basis in the country. VSNL has set up 6 internet
nodes that were established at Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkatta (Calcutta),
Bangalore and Pune, each GIAS internet node is connected to internet via
high speed circuits from one of the following service providers: MCI (USA),
KDD (JAPAN), Telecom Italia, and TELEGLOBE. A total of approximately 40 Mbps
bandwidth is available for internet data transmission in and out of India.
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