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The World Wide Web Chapter 9

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Title: The World Wide Web Chapter 9


1
The World Wide Web - Chapter 9
  • By Carollo, Koenen, Stecker

2
What is the World Wide Web
  • System that allows global linking of information
    modules in user determined sequences.
  • The web is an interface for computers that allows
    people anywhere to connect to any information
    anywhere else on the system.
  • Every major mass media company ahs put products
    on the web.
  • Many individuals have set up their own websites
    because the technology is so straightforward and
    access is so inexpensive.

3
How Significant is the Web as a Mass Media?
  • The number of Web users in the US is approaching
    100 million - 6 times the number in 1995, roughly
    30 of the US population.
  • Computers are now standard household equipment.
  • Almost every school child is computer literate.
  • 93 of newspapers and magazines had websites by
    2000.

4
The Invention
  • Invention of the Web was done single-handedly by
    Tim Berners-Lee
  • Devoted life to refining the web as a medium of
    communication open to everyone free.
  • 1989 Berners- Lee is an Oxford engineer who came
    up with the idea of the web for organizational
    purposes.
  • The software used was developed in 3 months and
    worked like a brain, remembering and storing
    information.
  • Computer language created was HTML- a hypertext
    markup language
  • URL- universal resource locator- the addressing
    system that lets people reach one another.

5
The Invention
  • Berners-Lee also created HTTP ( Hypertext
    Transfer Protocol ), which links computers
    together.
  • 1992- Leading research organizations committed to
    the web in the Netherlands, Germany, and the US.
  • 1993- In one 8 month period, web use multiplied
    414 times.
  • Some people compare Berners Lee to Johannes
    Guttenberg.

6
The Web in Context
  • People get the terms internet and the web
    confused
  • Internet- the fundamental network that carries
    messages (dates back to military communication in
    Laba)
  • Web- structure of codes that permits the exchange
    not only of text but also of graphics, video, and
    audio.

7
The Web in Context
  • The term web comes from the spidery links among
    millions of computer that tap into the system.
  • Cyber- prefix for human connection via computers
  • Cyberspace- introduced by sci-fi novelist William
    Gibson in his book Neuromancer in 1984.

8
Bandwidth Limitations
  • Bandwidth- space available in a medium such as a
    cable of the electromagnetic spectrum to carry
    messages.
  • Fiber optic cable- glass strands capable of
    carrying data as light
  • Multiplexing- technology to transmit numerous
    messages simultaneously
  • Compression- technology that makes a message more
    compact by deleting nonessential underlying
    codes.
  • Streaming- technology that allows playback of a
    message to begin before all the components have
    arrived.

9
The Internet
  • Today, and Information Superhighway has been
    built- an electronic network that connects
    libraries, corporations, government agencies, and
    individuals.
  • The Internet is the backbone of network for web
    communication.
  • The Internet has its origins in a 1969 U.S.
    Defense Department computer network called
    ARPAnet.
  • The National Science Foundation developed the
    current Internet to give scholars access to
    supercomputers.

10
The Internet
  • The NSF network became a connector for thousands
    of University supercomputers who paid an average
    of 43,000 a year to hook into it.
  • Online Services
  • Mead Data Central- created Lexis, Nexis in 1978
  • Lexis- 1st online full-text database carries
    legal documents
  • Nexis-1st online database with national news

11
Commerce and the Web
  • Advertising Free Origins
  • The World Wide Web Consortium created the dot-com
    suffix to identify sites that existed to do
    business.
  • Web Commerce
  • Point of purchase- in store advertising to catch
    buyers in addition to taking orders and shipping
    products
  • Business to Business- they service other
    businesses have take to the web to supplement
    their traditional means of reaching their
    consumers.

12
Commerce and the Web
  • Advertising Forums- at dot-com sites, the
    noncommercial content is the attraction.
  • The site instead sells advertisers on the access
    it provides them to an audience attracted by the
    news content.
  • Web Advertising
  • 1997- the first profit reported from an intended
    advertising supported site.

13
Web Advertising Numbers
  • 1992
  • Web Advertising Revenue 1.9 Billion
  • Web Magazine advertising 153.7 million
  • News/Information site advertising 152 million
  • 1999
  • Web Advertising Revenue 4.6 Billion
  • Web Magazine advertising 687 million
  • News/Information site advertising 368 million

14
Web Usage
  • 1995- 13.5 million
  • 1996- 29.0 million
  • 1997- 46.8 million
  • 1998- 62.0 million
  • 1999- 79.4 million
  • 2000- 98.1 million

15
Measuring the Web Audience
University of Dayton
  • In 2000, the webs reach has grown to 20 of the
    North American Population.
  • Cyberspace has become an effective place for
    advertisers to reach consumers.
  • One Problem
  • No one has solid data on how many people are
    surfing to websites that carry ads.
  • The Cause
  • Different survey companies use different methods
    to gather data. There are no set definitions for
    web surfers.

16
Measuring the Web Audience
  • The Result
  • 3 companies measured the the web traffic on
    CNN.com in May 1998.
  • _at_Plan counted 11.8 million users
  • Relevant Knowledge counted 5.6 million users
  • Media Metrix counted 2.5 million users
  • The Conclusion
  • Today the Internet Advertising Bureau and the
    Advertising Research Foundation are working on
    measurement guidelines to achieve solid numbers
    on which to base decisions on placing their ads.

17
Why is the Web audience information important?
  • This data is needed to establish advertising
    rates.
  • In traditional media, advertisers look to
    standard measures like cost per thousand (cpm)
    to calculate cost effectiveness of ads.
  • No one expects data as accurate as press runs of
    broadcast ratings anytime soon.

18
Why is the Web audience information important?
  • The most common measurements of web usage is the
    Hit- every time someone clicks on a screen icon
    or highlighted section the web page records a
    hit.
  • Another measure is a visit- a count of people who
    visit a site.
  • Currently, web advertisers are charged by the
    day, the month, or by the hit.

19
Ranking Web Sites (counted as visits)
  • AOL.com 11.2 million
  • MSN.com 6.3 million
  • ZDnet.com 4.0 million
  • CNN.com 2.9 million
  • Weather.com 2.9 million
  • USAToday.com 2.5 million
  • MSNBC.com 2.2 million
  • Pathfinder.com 2.2 million
  • ESPN.com 1.9 million
  • ABCNews.com 1.7 million

20
Web Technology
  • 1947- Semiconductor switch developed in ATT
    Bell labs.
  • Semiconductor is a tiny sound based transistor
    that responds to weak on-off charges.
  • 1962- ATT sent messages to Chicago from suburban
    Skokie using transistor technology- the first
    digital telephone call.
  • 1965- ATT introduces multiplex telephone
    services.
  • 51 calls carried on a copper wire at the same
    time.

21
Web Technology
  • 1960s- Corning glass developed a cable that could
    carry light at faster speeds- 186,000 miles per
    second.
  • The fiber optic cable could carry more digitized
    multiple message on the the silicon cable.
  • 1962- Ted Nelson introduced the term hypertext.
  • Today- a single line can carry 60,000 telephone
    calls simultaneously. Such speed is what has
    made the web a mass medium that can deliver
    unprecedented quantities of information so
    quickly.

22
Hypertext
  • Hypertext created by Ted Nelson as another way
    for people to send and receive information.
  • Hyperfiction- allows the user to get involved in
    the story. An example is video games such as Myst
    and Raven.
  • Accuracy One problem with getting information
    from the web is reliability. Anyone can have a
    web page with whatever they want on it.

23
Transition of Technology
  • Guttenberg invented the movable metal type for
    books and then newspapers and magazines followed.
  • Sound recording on the radio was a progressive
    technology.
  • The internet and cable television are coming
    together to make entertainment easier and faster
    to access.
  • Examples Time Warner Cable using Road Runner
    modem to access Time Warner and AOL.

24
The Internet Barriers Lifted
  • 1984-The Ronald Reagan administration took no
    action against the many major mergers.
  • Bill Clinton allowed mergers to strengthen
    companies on a global standpoint.
  • The Telecommunications Act of 1996 allowed for
    communication (telephone) companies to provide
    video programming and Cable Television companies
    were allowed to offer two way local phones with
    their cable.

25
The Internet Barriers Lifted
  • These advances led to the advancement of services
    with higher quality, faster delivery.

26
Universal Access
  • Although it seems like everybody has access to
    the internet, most of the global population does
    not.
  • For every 1,000 web users are from
  • North America 479.1
  • Western Europe 217.5
  • Eastern Europe 32.7
  • Asia-Pacific 16.6
  • South Central America 21.1
  • Middle Asia Africa 7.2

27
The Future of the Web
  • Bandwidth improvements will expand capacity
    exponentially for the transimission and exchange
    of messages.
  • The web will untether itself from the landlines
    on which most message move today.
  • A wireless future will make the web a medium of
    ultimate portability.
  • Today we already see over-air radio stations that
    stream online, magazines and newspapers on the
    web, and recordings that are downloadable.

28
The End
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