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Internet Glossary

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z


- M -

Mail bombing
The act of sending hundreds or thousands of messages to someone you think deserves the punishment for transgressions against the Internet. Highly discouraged as it chews up bandwidth unnecessarily.
Mailing list
A list of people who all receive postings sent to the group. Mailing lists exist on all sorts of topics. Each time you or any member of the list posts a reply to the conversation, it is distributed to the e-mail box of every member of the list. All of this traffic is automated and managed by programs called mailing list managers or mail servers. The two most frequently used programs are Listserv and Majordomo.

A mailing list is said to be "unmoderated" if all of the messages sent to the list are automatically forwarded to each member of the list. In a "moderated" list, all messages are sent first to a list moderator, who decides if a message is appropriate and should be passed on to everyone else.

Here are some tips for using mailing lists:
  • Subscribe carefully. Subscribe to one or two mailing lists and then wait and see what the volume of traffic is before you subscribe to another. You can easily be overwhelmed by the number of messages.
  • Keep the list subscription instructions! After you send your subscription e-mail you will get a response from the list welcoming you and giving you instructions on how to leave the list. Keep this mail. It is bad netiquette to send messages to the list requesting help in unsubscribing. You are expected to keep the initial instruction file.
  • Please turn off the list when you go on vacation. A high-traffic list can generate hundreds of messages a day, and your system administrator will not be happy if you leave those messages in your e-mail box while you are on vacation.
  • To avoid the painful experience of being flamed, pay attention to the instructions in the initial mail from the list administrator, read the FAQ if there is one, and read the list for a few days before you post.

Mailserver
A program that provides access to files via email.
Majordomo
A program which handles mailing list maintenance, such as adding and removing addresses from mailing lists.
Man pages
The Unix manual pages. You must go to the man pages to find out more about a Unix command. Accessed through use of the man command followed by the command whose description you want to view. Of course, you need access to a UNIX system before this works =)
MCI
A large telecommunications company that provides an email system called MCI Mail.
Megabyte
A million bytes. A thousand kilobytes.
Microsoft
A premeire software company that continues to define trends in personal computers. Their applications division includes some of the most popular software to date, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Works. Their systems division, of course, is responsible for bringing Windows, Windows for Workgroups, and Windows NT to the world.
MIME
Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions. MIME is an Internet protocol that allows you to send binary files across the Internet as attachments to e-mail messages. This includes graphics, photos, sound and video files, and formatted text documents. MIME has to negotiate many different operating systems and types of software to perform this amazing feat. Its invention has been a major step forward in the exchange of non-text information over the Internet.

E-mail programs that allow you to send and receive these types of files are said to be MIME-compliant. Many of these programs now incorporate MIME and have made it practically invisible to the user. You are probably using MIME when you send e-mail with an "attachment" of a formatted file. If not, then your mail program is using something very similar called UUencoding and UUdecoding to achieve the same result.
Mirror site
One FTP server provides copies of the same files as another server. Mirror sites help distribute the load from a single popular site. Used when an FTP site is so frequently accessed that the volume of users accessing it keeps others from getting through. A mirror site provides an alternate way to access the same files.
Modem
Stands for modulator-demodulator, because that's what it does, technically. In reality, a modem allows your computer to talk to another computer via the phone lines.
Moderator
An (overworked) volunteer who reads all of the submissions to a mailing list or newsgroup, to make sure they are appropriate, before posting them.
Monospaced font
A font whose characters are all the same width. Courier New is the most common monospaced font in Windows, but you can find others like Letter Gothic, Courier, and Orator. You generally want to use a monospaced font when reading text on the Internet.
MOO (Mud, Object Oriented)
One of several kinds of multi-user role-playing environments.
MPEG
Motion Picture Experts Group. More commonly, a compression format for video. Files compressed with MPEG generally have the extension .mpg, although it may be .mpeg on some sites.
MTU
Maximum Transmission Unit. In PPP a number determined by the connectivity software that helps determine the size of the packets of data that will be sent over your connection.
MUD
Multi-User Dungeon, or sometimes Multi-User Dimension. A text-based alternate reality where you can progress to a level at which you can modify the environment. Mostly used for games, and extremely addictive. A (usually text-based) multi-user simulation environment. Some are purely for fun and flirting, others are used for serious software development, or education purposes and all that lies in between. A significant feature of most MUDs is that users can create things that stay after they leave and which other users can interact with in their absence, thus allowing a world to be built gradually and collectively.
Multimedia
Using more than one type of media simultaneously, like text with sound, moving or still images, music, etc.
MUSE (Multi-User Simulated Environment)
One kind of MUD - usually with little or no violence.
MX record
Mail Exchange record. An entry in a domain name server database that tells mail transfer agents where they should route mail.

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- N -

NCSA
National Center for Supercomputing Applications. A group that has produced a great deal of public domain software for the scientific community. They wrote NCSA Telnet and have completed NCSA Mosaic for Windows, X Window, and Macintosh.
NetBEUI
Stands for NetBIOS Extended User Interface. It is the common networking protocol of Windows for Workgroups. Meant for small local area networks, it is sometimes difficult to get a PC to "talk" NetBEUI at anything else.
NetBIOS
Network Basic Input/Output System. NetBIOS is a very basic applications interface to allow an application to communicate on a network.
Netiquette
A form of online etiquette. This term refers to an informal code of conduct that governs what is generally considered to be the acceptable way for users to interact with one another online. Not following accepted netiquette is likely to get you flamed.
Netizen
Derived from the term citizen, referring to a citizen of the Internet, or someone who uses networked resources. The term connotes civic responsibility and participation.
Netscape
A WWW Browser and the name of a company. The Netscape Navigator browser was originally based on the Mosaic program developed at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA). This is the software provided with new Internet America accounts.

Netscape has grown in features rapidly and is widely recognized as the best and most popular web browser, but its current competition from Microsoft called Internet Explorer now holds the title of most popular browser.
NetWare
The most popular of PC local area networks by Novell, Inc. Rather than using TCP/IP as its "standard" protocol for intercomputer communications, it uses IPX/SPX. It is sometimes difficult to get a PC to "talk" TCP/IP and IPX/SPX at the same time.
Network Information Center
An organization that provides information about a network.
Network Time Protocol
A protocol for transmitting the correct time around the Internet.
News
Synonymous with Usenet news, or sometimes just Usenet.
Newsgroup
An electronic discussion group consisting of collections of postings (also called articles) on Usenet devoted to talking about a specific topic. There are thousands of newsgroups covering a wide range of subjects. You must subscribe to a newsgroup in order to participate in it or to track the discussion on an on-going basis. Unlike with a magazine or newspaper, subscribing to a newsgroup does not cost anything.

Various programs called newsreaders let you subscribe, read and post to newsgroups. Newsreaders may be included with your browser, or an entire separate program.

Before you post to a newsgroup, do yourself a big favor and read other postings carefully for a few days. Newsgroups are famous for flames. Read the FAQ about the newsgroup if there is one. It is considered a major breach of netiquette to ask a question that is clearly answered in the FAQ. It is also considered a poor use of bandwidth to post a reply to millions of users saying "me too!" Replies of this sort can and should be directed to the sender directly by e-mail.
.newsrc
The file that Unix newsreaders use to keep track of which messages in which newsgroups you've read.
Newsreader
A program that helps you read news and provides capabilities for following or deleting threads. A software program that lets you subscribe to newsgroups as well as read and post messages to them. A newsreader is like a friendly librarian who keeps track of the articles posted to the newsgroups you like to read and locates them when you want to read them.
Nickname
Email: an easy-to-remember shortcut for an email address. Sometimes also called an alias.

IRC: the name that others will see when you speak. Often abbreviated "nick." Because IRC is used by so many individuals, originality when choosing a nick is important.
NNTP
Net News Transport Protocol. A transmission protocol for the transfer of Usenet news.
Nodename
The name of a machine. The "node" is an addressable point on a network. On the Internet, a node is a host computer with a unique domain name and IP address that has been assigned to it by InterNIC. For instance, IA mail's server is a node. Its node name is mail.airmail.net or 206.66.12.40.
Notepad
Windows application that allows you to view (and edit) ASCII text files. Typically use with files of the .txt extension.

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- O -

Offline
Actions performed when you aren't actually connected to another computer.
Online
Actions performed when you are connected to another computer.

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- P -

Packet/Packet Switching
A packet is a chunk of information sent over a network.

Packet-switching is the process by which a carrier breaks up data into these chunks or "packets." Each packet contains the address of origin, the address of its destination, and information about how to reunite with other related packets. This process allows packets from many different locations to co-mingle on the same lines and be sorted and directed to different routes by special machines along the way.
Page
In the World Wide Web, the name for the basic document type.
Parse
Parsing data refers to the process by which programming data input is broken into smaller, more distinct chunks of information that can be more easily interpreted and acted upon.
Password
A code used to gain access to a locked system. Good passwords contain letters and non-letters and are not simple combinations such as virtue7. A good password might be: 6%wwtai8. To choose an unusual password that you can still remember you might take the first letter of each word in a phrase that means something to you.

For instance, if I take the first line of my favorite poem "When I see birches bend to left and right" -- that becomes wisbbtl8 (since it can only be 8 characters).
Pentium
Class of processors brought to you by Intel Corporation.
PERL (Practical Extraction and Reporting Language)
A robust programming language frequently used for creating CGI programs on web servers because it is faster than UNIX shell script programs, it can read and write binary files, and it can process very large files. The major advantage of PERL over C as a programming language is that PERL does not need to be compiled.
Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)
A program, developed by Phil Zimmerman, which cryptographically protects files and electronic mail from being read by others. It may also be used to digitally sign a document or message, thus authenticating the creator.
PKZIP or PKUNZIP
Suite of utilities from PKWARE for compressing and uncompressing DOS and Windows files. Uses the .zip extension.
Plug-in
A (usually small) piece of software that adds features to a larger piece of software. An examples is a plug-in for web browsers, like Real Audio.

The idea behind plug-in's is that a small piece of software is loaded into memory by the larger program, adding a new feature, and that users need only install the few plug-ins that they need, out of a much larger pool of possibilities. Plug-ins are usually created by people other than the publishers of the software the plug-in works with.
POP (Point of Presence, also Post Office Protocol)
Two commonly used meanings. A Point of Presence usually means a city or location where a network can be connected to, often with dial up phone lines. So if an Internet company says they will soon have a POP in Belgrade, it means that they will soon have a local phone number in Belgrade and/or a place where leased lines can connect to their network.

A second meaning, Post Office Protocol refers to the way e-mail software such as Eudora gets mail from a mail server. When you obtain a SLIP, PPP, or shell account you almost always get a POP account with it, and it is this POP account that you tell your e-mail software to use to get your mail. Post Office Protocol.
Port
Three meanings. First and most generally, a place where information goes into or out of a computer, or both. E.g. the serial port on a personal computer is where a modem would be connected.

On the Internet, port often refers to a number that is part of a URL, appearing after a colon (:) right after the domain name. Every service on an Internet server listens on a particular port number on that server. Most services have standard port numbers, e.g. Web servers normally listen on port 80. Services can also listen on non-standard ports, in which case the port number must be specified in a URL when accessing the server.

Finally, port also refers to translating a piece of software to bring it from one type of computer system to another, e.g. to translate a Windows program so that is will run on a Macintosh. In software, the act of converting code so that a program runs on more than one type of computer. In TCP/IP networking, a number that identifies a specific "channel" used by network services.
Post
Posting is what you do when you add a message to a mailing list or Usenet discussion. Your article might be called a "post."
PPP
Point to Point Protocol. PPP is a communications protocol used to transmit network data over telephone lines. It allows you to connect your computer to the Internet itself, rather than logging on through an Internet Service Provider's host computer and using UNIX commands through a shell. This type of connection lets you communicate directly with other computers on the network using TCP/IP connections. It is part of the TCP/IP suite of programs necessary to connect to and use the Internet.

PPP is the type of connection that Internet America provides its customers.
Program Group
A mechanism in the Windows 3.x Program Manager that allows you to collect like applications. For instance, you could have a group consisting of all WinSock applications. Groups are not nest-able, in that you cannot have groups within groups.
Program Item
An executable entity in the form of an icon that lives in a Program Group of the Windows Program Manager. Typically, double-clicking on these will launch applications, but in some cases the icon can launch documents or batch files.
Program Manager
Windows 3.x default shell or interface. The Program Manager allows you to launch other Windows applications.
proportionally spaced font
A font whose characters vary in width, so that, for example, a W is wider than an i. Proportionally spaced fonts often work poorly when you're reading text on the Internet.
protocol
A protocol is the "standard," or set of rules, that two computers use to communicate with each other. Also known as a communications protocol or network protocol, this is a language that assures that different network products or programs can work together. Any product that uses a given protocol should work with any other product using the same protocol.

Protocols dictate the "whats" and the "hows" of the various systems on the Internet. The success of the Internet, its very existence, in fact, depends on people voluntarily agreeing to configure their hardware and software to the TCP/IP standard.
Public domain
Software that you can use freely, distribute freely, and modify in any way you wish.

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- Q -

Query
The process by which a client requests specific information from a server, based on a character string that is passed along. A query typically takes the form of a database search for a particular keyword or phrase.
Quoting
The act of including parts of an original message in a reply. The standard character used to set off a quote from the rest of the text is a column of > (greater-than) characters along the left margin. When replying, be careful not to over-quote. Nothing can be more annoying than scrolling through the same 200 line message quoted with only "me too" added at the bottom.

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- R -

RFC (Request For Comments)
The name of the result and the process for creating a standard on the Internet. New standards are proposed and published on line, as a Request For Comments. The Internet Engineering Task Force is a consensus-building body that facilitates discussion, and eventually a new standard is established, but the reference number/name for the standard retains the acronym RFC, e.g. the official standard for e-mail is RFC 822.
RGB Mode
Short for Red, Green, and Blue, it is a color model commonly used to display color in video systems, film recorders and computer monitors. It represents all colors as combinations of red, green and blue light. RGB mode is the most common color mode for viewing and working with digital images on a screen.
Robots
Programs that are designed to automatically go out and explore the Internet for a variety of purposes. Robots that record and index all of the contents of the network to create searchable databases are sometimes called Spiders or Worms. WebCrawler and Lycos are popular examples of this.
Root directory
The topmost directory that you can see. Under DOS the root directory is typically c:\. Each volume or disk drive will have its own root directory.
rot13
A method of encoding possibly offensive postings on Usenet so that those who don't want to be offended can avoid accidentally seeing the posting. Works by converting each letter to a number (a = 1, b = 2, and so forth), adding 13 to the number, and then converting back into letters, rendering the file unreadable without deciphering.
ROFL
Abbreviation for Rolling on the Floor Laughing, this term is used in various online communications, such as e-mail messages or postings to newsgroups or BBSs. It usually appears in brackets like this: <rofl> and is another way of adding a humorous touch to a response.
Router
A piece of hardware or software that connects two or more networks. A router functions as a sorter and interpreter as it looks at addresses and passes bits of information to their proper destination. Software routers are sometimes referred to as gateways.

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- S -

Search Engines
A search engine is a type of software that creates indexes of databases or Internet sites based on the titles of files, key words, or the full text of files. The search engine has an interface that allows you to type what you're looking for into a blank field. It then gives you a list of the results of the search. When you use a search engine on the Web, the results are presented to you in hypertext, which means you can click on any item in the list to get the actual file. If the file you select doesn't have what you're looking for, you can use the Back button on your browser to return to the list of search results and try something else.

The other nice feature about search engines on the web is that if you have a website or page of your own, you can register it. When you submit key information about your page or site, it gets added to the index. This is a very good (but often overlooked) way to get people to visit your site. And it doesn't cost a thing! You can register separately with each site or take advantage of a free service called Submit It! that lets you register with all search engines (or selected ones), in one simple step.

Here are some of the most popular search engines:

  • WebCrawler is an automated robot (a type of program) that continuously searches and indexes the web.
  • Lycos describes itself as a catalog of the Internet. The Lycos Web explorer uses a robot that searches the World Wide Web every day, building a database of all the Web pages it finds.
  • Yahoo is a subject oriented index guide for the World Wide Web and Internet. Yahoo! gets its links in two ways:

    1. Through user submissions from people who register the links of their home pages.
    2. Sending out automated search robots that look for new announcements and collect information about new sites on the Net.

  • Excite! is my personal favorite.

Self-extracting archive
A compressed file or files encapsulated in a decompression program, so you don't need any other programs to expand the archive. A self-extracting archive will always have an extension of .exe since this is consistent with application files under DOS and Windows.
Server
A machine that makes services available on a network to client programs. A file server makes files available. An email server handles email and so forth.
Shareware
A method of software distribution in which the software may be freely distributed, and you may try it before paying. If you decide to keep and use the program, you send your payment directly to the shareware author. It is a good idea to actually pay for (register) your software to support new and improved versions of your favorite programs.
Shell
A common interface, either command-based or graphical. Typical Unix Shells are csh, ksh, and sh. The Macintosh shell is the Finder; the DOS shell is COMMAND.COM; the Windows 3.x shell is the Program Manager; the Windows 95 shell is the explorer.exe.
Shockwave
Shockwave is a set of programs/plugins that allow Macromedia Director animation files to be played over the Internet with a web browser. Possible uses for this type of animation on the Web include online advertising, games, training, and animated logos.
Signature
Several lines automatically appended to your email messages, usually listing your name and email address, sometimes along with witty sayings and ASCII graphics. Netiquette demands that you keep them short (4 lines or less), and leave out the ASCII graphics.
.sit
The filename extension used by files compressed with StuffIt, a popular Macintosh archival and compression program.
SLIP
Serial Line Internet Protocol. Like PPP, a protocol that lets your computer pretend it is a full Internet machine using only a modem and a normal phone line. SLIP is older and less flexible than PPP. It is part of the TCP/IP suite of programs necessary to connect to and use the Internet.

If you have a dial-up account to an Internet service provider, you are using either PPP or SLIP to make your connection to the Internet. Although SLIP is easy to install and use, it does not provide the error correction or negotiation features that PPP has. For this reason, PPP is rapidly replacing SLIP as the more common standard. Internet America provides PPP rather than SLIP.
Smileys
Another word for emoticons. They are collections of characters meant to totally replace body language, intonation, and complete physical presence. You may have to tilt your head to the side to see that :) is a smile or 8) is a smile from someone wearing glasses.
SMTP
Simple Mail Transport Protocol. The language used by mail transfer agents on the Internet to transfer mail. Eudora uses SMTP to send mail.
Snail mail
The standard name on the Internet for paper mail because email can travel across the country in seconds, where as letter sent via the post office could take days.
SPAM
Originally just a canned sandwich filler product, now this term is also used to refer to the practice of blindly posting commercial messages or advertisements to a large number of unrelated and uninterested newsgroups. DON'T DO IT!!! Spamming is a violation of the Internet America acceptable use policy, and your account could be cancelled or suspended.

As an IA customer, if you receive spam (unsolicited email for example) forward the message to the Policy Enforcement Department and they will report it to the correct individuals.
Spamming
The act of sending hundreds of inappropriate postings to Usenet newsgroups and mailing lists. Do it and you'll seriously regret it. Some people new to the internet do not recognize spam. Be aware that chain letter promsing thousands of dollars just by sending a dollar to the names on a list are illegal - no matter what the text says. Letting a "few" people know your URL (in this case, a few being the thousands of people exposed to multiple messages across usenet) is spamming.

Spamming is a violation of the Internet America terms of service, and can result in your account being cancelled or suspended. Don't do it!
StuffIt
A family of programs originally developed by Raymond Lau and now published by Aladdin Systems. Also the compression format used by those programs. Typically used only in the Macintosh world, the extension is .sit.
System Administrator
The person who runs your host machine or network. Also known as the network administrator or just plain administrator. Be very nice to this person.

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- T -

10Base2
A physical layer communications specification for 10 Mbps, baseband data transmission over a coaxial cable (Thinnet) with a maximum cable segment length of 200 meters.
10Base5
A physical layer communications specification for 10 Mbps, baseband data transmission over a coaxial cable (Thicknet) with a maximum cable segment length of 500 meters.
10BaseF
A physical layer communications specification for 10 Mbps, baseband data transmission over a fiber-optic cable.
10BaseT
A physical layer communications specification for 10 Mbps, basebanddata transmission over a twisted-pair copper wire.
T-1
A high-speed leased line network link used on the Internet A high-speed digital connection capable of transmitting data at a rate of approximately 1.5 million bits per second. A T1 line is typically used by small and medium-sized companies with heavy network traffic. It is large enough to send and receive very large text files, graphics, sounds, and databases instantaneously, and is the fastest speed commonly used to connect networks to the Internet. Sometimes referred to as a leased line, a T1 is usually too large and too expensive for individual home use (1.54 megabits/second).
T-3
An even higher speed leased line network link used on the Internet A super high-speed connection capable of transmitting data at a rate of 45 million bits per second. This represents a bandwidth equal to about 672 regular voice-grade telephone lines, which is wide enough to transmit full-motion real-time video, and very large databases over a busy network. A T3 line is typically installed as a major networking artery for large corporations and universities with high volume network traffic. For example, the backbones of the major Internet service providers are comprised of T3 lines (45 megabits/second).
Tags
The set of descriptive formatting codes used in HTML documents that instruct a web browser how to display text and graphics on a web page. For example, to make text bold, the tag <B> is used at the beginning and end of the text.
.tar
The filename extension used by files made into an archive by the Unix tar program.
TCP
Transmission Control Protocol. It works with IP to ensure that packets travel safely on the Internet.
TCP/IP
The combination of Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol, which are base protocols on which the Internet is founded. This is the language governing communications between all computers on the Internet. TCP/IP is a set of instructions that dictates how packets of information are sent across multiple networks. Also included is a built-in error-checking capability to ensure that data packets arrive at their final destination in the proper order.

IP, or Internet Protocol, is the specification that determines where packets are routed to, based on their destination address. TCP, or Transmission Control Protocol, makes sure that the packets arrive correctly at their destination address. If TCP determines that a packet was not received, it will try to resend the packet until it is received properly.

You must be running TCP/IP to have full Internet access. In Unix, TCP/IP is a part of the operating system. In the DOS and Windows world, the functionality of TCP/IP is handled by Winsock. This piece of software takes care of your TCP/IP configuration information.
Telnet
Both a terminal emulation protocol that lets you log in to other machines, and programs that implement this protocol on various platforms. Once you are logged into the remote system, you can download files, engage in conferencing, and perform the same commands as if you were directly connected by computer.
Terabyte
1000 gigabytes.
Terminal
A piece of hardware like a VT100 that lets you interact with a character-based operating system such as Unix.
Terminal emulator
Software that allows one computer to act like a dedicated terminal, such as a VT100, to another computer.
Terminal Server
A special purpose computer that has places to plug in many modems on one side, and a connection to a LAN or host machine on the other side. Thus the terminal server does the work of answering the calls and passes the connections on to the appropriate node. Most terminal servers can provide PPP or SLIP services if connected to the Internet.
Text
In terms of files, a file that contains characters only from the ASCII character set. In terms of FTP, a mode that assumes the files you will be transferring contain only ASCII characters. You set this mode in FTP with the ASCII command. (This is the default. If you want to transfer binary files, you must signal this with the command "bin").
Thread
A group of messages in a Usenet newsgroup that all share the same subject and topic. Most newsreaders will let you sort by thread, that is, group all the messages together so you can read or ignore all the messages about that topic depending on your interest.
Timeout
After a certain amount of idle time, some connections will disconnect. For example, at Internet America, if your modem connection is idle (that is, not passing any data in either direction), you will be disconnected from our modem. Timeouts can also apply to your client-server connections. FTP or email retrieval can timeout, and so forth.
Traceroute
A program available on many systems which traces the path a packet takes to a destination. It is mostly used to debug routing problems between hosts.
Twisted pair
A type of cable in which pairs of conductors are twisted together to produce certain electrical properties.
.txt
The filename extension generally used for straight text files that you can read (as opposed to text files that have been encoded by BinHex or UUencode).

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- U -

UART
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter. The chip used in the serial port of most computers and communications equipment. In older PCs it is most common to have an 8250 UART, which typically has a maximum throughput of 19,200 bps. The 16550 UART is far more suitable for faster communications. Internal modems have thier own UART, and are likely to be 16550. However, external modems on older computers can have problems because external modems use the computers own UART.
Unix
An extremely popular and powerful, if completely cryptic, operating system in wide use on computers on the Internet. Many web sites are maintained on UNIX systems. While technically the name UNIX refers to only a few trademark-licensed versions, it is often used to refer to the many versions currently available on the market. The differences to the user are slight.

UNIX was commercially released in the early 1970s. By the late '70s, the University of California, Berkeley had developed its own version, called BSD (for Berkeley Software Distribution), which it offered for free to other colleges and universities.

UNIX now runs on every hardware platform from PC and Macintosh to high performance graphical workstations to multimillion dollar supercomputers. The big difference between versions and platforms is that the more expensive platforms run faster or support more simultaneous users. Other operating systems work fine on the Internet, but Unix is probably the most common.
Upload
To send a file to another machine. Often confused with download, uploading a file means loading it from your computer onto a remote one. Most people do a lot more downloading than uploading.
Upstream
Machines that send you most of your Usenet news are said to be upstream from you. Machines that get most of their news from you are downstream.
Urban legend
A story, which may have started with a grain of truth, that has been embroidered and retold until it has passed into the realm of myth. Some legends that periodically make their rounds include "The Infamous Modem Tax," "Craig Shergold/Brain Tumor/Get Well Cards," and "The $250 Cookie Recipe."
URL
Uniform Resource Locator. Pronounced You-Are-Ell. An efficient mechanism for identifying specific resources on the Internet. A URL is the address for a resource or site (usually a directory or file) on the World Wide Web and the convention that web browsers use for locating files and other remote services.

Here are some examples of URL's:
  http://www.yahoo.com
  ftp://ftp.airmail.net/pub
  news:://rec.humor.funny
      
The first part of a URL tells you the type of resource (or method of access) at that address.
  • http - a hypertext document or directory
  • gopher - a gopher document or menu
  • ftp - a file available for downloading or a directory of such files
  • news - a newsgroup
  • telnet - a computer system that you can log into from across the Internet
  • WAIS - a database or document on a WAIS (Wide Area Information Search) database
  • file - a file located on a local drive (like your hard drive)

The second part of a URL is typically the address of the computer where the data or service is located. Additional parts may specify the names of files, the port to connect to, or the text to search for in a database.

Most of the URLs you'll be using start with "http" which stands for "hypertext transport protocol." HTTP is the method by which HTML files are transferred over the Web. Here are a couple of other important things to remember about URLs:
  1. A URL has no spaces.
  2. A URL always uses forward slashes.
  3. If you enter a URL incorrectly, your browser will not be able to locate the site or resource you want.
  4. You can find the URL behind any link by passing your mouse pointer over the link. The pointer will turn into a hand and the URL will appear in the browser's status bar.

Usenet
Usenet refers to the collection of newsgroups (sometimes called the Big Eight hierarchies) and a set of agreed upon rules for distributing and maintaining them.

Usenet newsgroups are arranged hierarchically first by the name of the group, followed by the name of the subgroups. Each name in the hierarchy is separated by a period. For example, a discussion group about animation is rec.art.animation. It is in the rec. (recreation) group, in the art. subgroup, and is defined more specifically as animation.

The Usenet Big Eight hierarchies are as follows:
  • comp - computer science and related topics
  • news - information about the newsgroups
  • rec - hobbies and recreational activities
  • sci - scientific research and applications
  • soc - social issues, including politics
  • talk - debate on controversial topics
  • misc - anything that doesn't fit in the above categories

Not all newsgroups are part of Usenet. For example, the newsgroups with a prefix of alt. are not part of the core Usenet newsgroups, although they may look just like Usenet newsgroups to the average user. Another example of a non-Usenet newsgroup is the Clarinet news feed, which is a commercial information service that also looks like any other newsgroup to the end-user.

System administrators decide which newsgroups will be carried on their systems. Making newsgroups available to their users means dedicating hard-drive space for storage, so decisions have to be made about the allocation of those resources. Many administrators will not carry the "alt." groups. Some even refuse to carry any group with the word "sex" in the name. You have to check with your provider to find out what newsgroups they carry.

Internet America carries close to 25,000 groups. There is no "censorship" based on group title, nor do we exclude a group because it takes up a lot of hard drive space. The more popular groups will expire faster, however.
Usenet news
The news that flows through Usenet. Sometimes abbreviated Usenet or news.
User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
An Internet Standard transport layer protocol defined in RFC 768. It is a connectionless protocol which adds a level of reliability and multiplexing to IP. It is just one of the types of packets used in TCP/IP.
Userid
The name you use to log in to another computer. Synonymous with username. In most cases, this information should be entered in *exactly* as given to you. UNIX is case-sensitive.
Username
See userid.
UUcode
A file format used for transferring binary files in email, which can only reliably carry ASCII files. See also uuencode and uudecode.
UUCP
Unix to Unix CoPy. UUCP is a small pun on the fact that the Unix copy command is cp. UUCP is a transmission protocol that carries email and news.
uudecode
A Unix program for decoding files in the uuencode format, turning them from ASCII back into binary files.
uuencode
A Unix program that turns binary files into ASCII files for transmission via email.

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v.34
A standard modem protocol. Although not required, almost all v.34 modems support all sorts of other protocols, including v.32, v.32bis, v.42 error correction, and v.42bis data compression. Don't worry about the specifics; just try to match protocols with the modems you call.
v.90
A standard modem protocol that emerged from a combination of the x2 and K56flex protocols. This protocol allows modems to download at speeds up to 56kbps over regular phone lines, although the FCC currently limits the speed to 53kbps.
v.92
The next revision of the v.90 protocol. It added three key features to the v.90 standard: quick connect (for quicker handshake negotiations), modem-on-hold (like call waiting, but for your modem), and PCM Upstream (which increases the maximum upload rate from 33.6kbps to 48kbps).
Virus
A program which replicates itself on computer systems by incorporating itself into other programs which are shared among computer systems.
VT100
Originally, a dedicated terminal built by Digital Equipment Corporation to interface to mainframes. The VT100 became a standard for terminals, and as a result almost all terminal emulation programs can emulate the VT100.

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WAIS
Wide Area Information Servers. A set of full-text databases containing information on hundreds of topics. You can search WAIS using natural-language queries and use relevance feedback to refine your search.
WAN
An acronym for Wide Area Network. Wide area network: A group of geographically separated computers connected via dedicated lines or satellite links. The Internet enables small organizations to simulate a wide area network without the cost of one.
Webmaster or Webmistress
A person in charge of maintaining a web site. This can include writing HTML files, setting up more complex programs, and responding to e-mail. Many sites encourage you to mail comments and questions about the site's web pages to the webmaster.
Web Page
A web page is a document created with HTML (HyperText Markup Language) that is part of a group of hypertext documents or resources available on the World Wide Web. Collectively, these documents and resources form what is known as a website.

You can read HTML documents that reside somewhere on the Internet or on your local hard drive with a piece of software called a web browser. Web browsers read HTML documents and display them as formatted presentations, with any associated graphics, sound, and video, on a computer screen.

Web pages can contain hypertext links to other places within the same document, to other documents at the same web site, or to documents at other web sites. They also can contain fill-in forms, photos, large clickable images (image maps), sounds, and videos for downloading.
Wildcards
Special characters such as * and ? that can stand in for other characters during text searches in some programs. The * wildcard generally means "match any number of characters in this spot," whereas the ? wildcard generally means "match any single character in this spot."
Winsock
Windows Sockets (Winsock) is a TCP/IP extension to the Windows Applications Interface (API). It essentially allows Windows applications to run independently of the hardware underneath. It is just like the device independence you gain with a Windows graphics program -- it can run independently of your video board.
WinZip
A compression program for Windows that allows you to "zip" and "unzip" ZIP files as well as other standard types of archive files. Used to expand files which have been compressed to make them smaller. See .zip.
World Wide Web
The newest and most ambitious of the special Internet services. World Wide Web browsers can display styled text and graphics. The exact definition for the World Wide Web (popularly known as the Web) varies, depending on whom you ask. Three common descriptions are as follows:
  1. A collection of resources (Gopher, FTP, http, telnet, Usenet, WAIS and others) which can be accessed via a web browser.
  2. A collection of hypertext files available on web servers.
  3. A set of specifications (protocols) that allows the transmission of web pages over the Internet.

You can think of the Web as a worldwide collection of text and multimedia files and other network services interconnected via a system of hypertext documents. HTTP (HyperText Transfer Protocol) was created in 1990, at CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland, as a means for sharing scientific data internationally, instantly, and inexpensively. With hypertext a word or phrase can contain a link to other text. To achieve this they developed a programming language called HTML that allows you to easily link you to other pages or network services on the Web.

If you encounter a page with a word that is highlighted in some way (usually in a different color and underlined), you can click on that word and "go to" the page or resource to which connects. Of course, you are not actually "going" anywhere when you do this, but rather, you are summoning the file or resource that the link points to. This non-linear, non-hierarchical method of accessing information was a breakthrough in information sharing and quickly became the major source of traffic on the Internet.
Worm
A program that infiltrates a computer system and copies itself many times, filling up memory and disk space and crashing the computer. The most famous worm of all time was released accidentally by Robert Morris over the Internet and brought down whole sections of the net.
WWW
See World Wide Web.

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Yahoo!
A very popular search engine and online community. With Yahoo!, you can doing almost anything, from searching the internet to sending email to participiating in online auctions.

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.zip
The filename extension used by files compressed into the ZIP format common on PCs. Zipped files are common on the Internet because they are smaller and require less space to house. They must be unzipped to use. WinZip or PKunzip are common programs used to uncompress .zip files.

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