Thursday 3 September 2015

How the Web works

Computers connected to the Web are called clients and servers.
  • Clients are the Web user's Internet-connected devices (computer connected to Wi-Fi, or cellphone connected to mobile network) and a web browsing software on those devices (Chrome, Firefox, etc). 
  • Servers are computers that store webpages, sites, or apps. When a client device wants to access a webpage, a copy of the webpage is downloaded from the server onto the client machine to be displayed in the user's web browser.

  • Websites are a collection of files. 
  • When a website is published, the files are copied to an online location that allows other people to access it too. 
  • When a person views a website, they are downloading a copy of these files. 
  • The internet is a collection of interconnected networks that all link together. 
  • Every computer connected to the internet is part of the network. 
  • Computers connect to the internet via a modem and an Internet Service Provider (ISP) The ISP then connects to a larger networks. 
  • Network access points (NAPs) allow these networks to link together. 
  • Routers ensure that correct data is transferred to it’s intended destination on each computer. 
  • High-speed backbones have a large capacity and interconnect at various NAPs around the world. These cables allow people from all over the globe to connect and transmit data extremely fast.
  • Every computer has it’s own identifying number (IP address)
  • The Domain Name System (DNS) automatically maps the IP address into a web address. 
  • The Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is composed of the domain name and other information such as ‘http’ and ‘www’. 


No comments:

Post a Comment