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- Introduction to Microsoft Internet Explorer
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- Learn how Web browser software displays Web pages.
- Learn how Web page addresses are constructed.
- Learn the main functions common to all Web browsers.
- Configure and use the Microsoft Internet Explorer Web browser to
navigate the Web.
- Save and organize Web addresses using IE
- Save Web page text and graphics using Internet Explorer.
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- Client/Server Structure of the Web
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- On the Internet, your computer becomes a Web client in a worldwide
client/server network.
- Web browser: (client software)
software that runs on your computer to make it a Web client.
- Web servers: Computers connected to the Internet that contain files
their owners have made available publicly through their Internet
connections.
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- Accesses server
- Retrieves HTML document using HTTP
- Displays the page in a window on your screen
- May I assume you’ve done this?
- Look at our syllabus, references, links, unixlinx
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- Hypertext Markup Language (HTML): standard language used on the Web.
- HTML uses codes (tags) to tell the Web browser software how to display
text.
- HTML anchor tag: enables Web designers to link HTML documents to each
other.
- Hypertext links: can connect HTML documents together; can also connect
one part of HTML document to another part.
- Hypermedia links: hyperlinks that connect to computer files that contain
pictures, graphics, and media objects such as sound and video clips.
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- When a Web browser displays an HTML document, it is often referred to as
a Web page.
- A collection of linked Web pages with a common theme is called a Web
site.
- The main page that all of the other pages on the Web site are organized
around (and link back to) is called the site’s home page.
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- Internet Protocol Address (IP): unique id number given to each computer
on the Internet.
- 4 8-bit numbers (called octet in networking) separated by dots. Each is
0-255 or 0 to 28-1.
- Domain Name: unique name associated with specific IP address by a
program that runs on an Internet host computer.
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- Domain Name Software (DNS) coordinates IP addresses and domain names.
- Domain name server: the host computer that runs DNS software.
- The last part of domain name is called its top-level domain (TLD). New
ones have been added by ICANN.
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- Unique address of each webpage
- Domain name of computer on which file resides.
- Path of folder or directory on computer on which file resides.May not
need it if the file is in the
publc_html directory.
- Filename name of file. index.html is the default.
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- how:// where/ what
- protocol:// domain/ file
- optional
path default is index.html
- DOS and Windows use \. URLs use
/.
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- Title Bar
- Scroll Bars
- Status Bar
- Menu Bar
- Page Tab (IE plans for future)
- Standard Buttons Toolbar
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- Click Start on the taskbar, point to All Programs, click Internet
Explorer. Or icon on desktop.
- The Standard Buttons toolbar has buttons that execute frequently used
commands.
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- Use the Refresh button in IE to load the same Web page that appears in
the browser window again.
- Use the Stop button to halt the
Web page transfer from the server.
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- The Home button on the Standard Buttons toolbar displays the home (or
start) page (first page that opens when you start your browser).
- Another use of same term
- You can set your homepage. Tools. Internet options. Many use Google.
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- The status bar at the bottom of the window includes several panels that
give you information about Internet Explorer’s operations.
- Transfer progress report & graphical transfer progress indicator.
- Security zone.
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- Click at end of current text in the Address bar, then delete any
unnecessary or unwanted text from the displayed URL.
- Type the URL of the location to which you want to go.
- Press the Enter key (or Go) to load the URL’s Web page in the browser
window.
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- Easiest way to move from one Web page to another is to use the mouse to
click hyperlinks:
- Click the hyperlink
- When you’re finished, right-click the new Web page’s background
- Click Back on the shortcut menu
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- Right click is often convenient. Brings up contextual shortcut menu.
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- The Favorites List lets you store and organize a list of Web pages that
you have visited so you can return to them easily.
- You can create folders in which to store your favorites.
- You can easily organize your folders in a hierarchical structure even
after you have stored them.
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- Favorites
- The Back and Forward buttons on the Standard Buttons toolbar and the Back
and Forward options on the shortcut menu enable you to move to and from
previously visited pages.
- To see where you have been during a session, you can open the history
list by clicking on the History button on the Standards Buttons toolbar.
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- Web Search Engines: Web pages that conduct searches of the Web to find
words or expressions you enter.
- Web Directory: a Web page that contains a list of Web page categories
like education or recreation. Can narrow the results returned for a
particular search.
- Web directory editors categorize the Web pages.
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- A small file that a Web server writes to the disk of the client
computer.
- Can contain information about the user such as login names and
passwords.
- Assists in performing functions such as automatic login.
- User is often unaware that the files are being written to the computer’s
disk drive.
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- You can save copies of most Web pages as files that you can store on
your computer’s hard disk, floppy disk, etc.
- Some Web pages are written to make copying difficult or impossible.
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- You can save entire Web pages, selected portions of Web page text, or
particular graphics from a Web page to a disk.
- You can save portions of Web page text so you can use it in other
programs.
- You can save a graphic from a Web page by right-clicking on the picture
and clicking Save Picture As.
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- Laws that govern the use of photocopies, audio or video recordings, and
other reproductions of authors’ original work.
- Legal right of the author or other owner of an original work to control
reproduction, distribution and sale of that work.
- Comes into existence as soon as the work is placed into tangible form.
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- Exists even if the work does not contain a copyright notice.
- Fair use is a provision that allows students to use limited amounts of
copyrighted information in term papers and other reports in an academic
setting.
Source must always be cited.
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- Commercial use of copyright is more restricted.
- Obtain permission from copyright holder before using anything you copy
from a Web page.
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- The Print button on the Standard Buttons toolbar and the Print option on
the File menu let you print the current Web frame (right-click inside
the frame) or page.
- Print option lets you select some text.
- When printing long Web pages, reduce the font size of the Web pages
before you print them.
- To preview pages before you print them, select Print Preview from the
File menu.
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- You can check some of the security elements of a Web page by clicking
File, Properties, and then the Certificates button.
- Internet Explorer will display security information for the page that
appears in the browser window to advise you of the overall security of
the page.
- Encryption is a way of scrambling and encoding data transmissions that
reduces the risk that a person who intercepts the Web page as it travels
across the Internet will be able to decode and read the page’s contents.
- A padlock symbol appears in the status bar when Internet Explorer loads
an encrypted Web page.
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- Web pages and Web sites make up the World Wide Web.
- The Web uses a client/server structure in which Web server computers
make Web page files available to Web client computers that are running
Web browser software.
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- Each server computer on the Internet has an IP address that is mapped to
a domain name.
- The protocol, domain name, path, and Web page filename make up the
Uniform Resource Locator (URL). Last 2 are optional.
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- Web browsers display Web pages and maintain a history list that can be
used to find pages previously visited.
- Copyright exists even if the work does not contain a copyright notice.
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- Web browsers allow users to print and save Web pages and elements of Web
pages.
- All Web browsers have the same basic elements and can be used to explore
the Web in similar ways.
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