Datasheet

of interconnected human and computer minds.) Today we call that place the
Internet, and here’s what it encompasses.
The World Wide Web
The best-known part of the Internet isn’t a thing, and it isn’t owned or directly
managed by any individual, company, or government agency. That’s mostly a
good thing, although sometimes a world without limits can be taken over by
bandits, vandals, and other evildoers. The Internet is a
web of interconnections
between huge commercial, educational, and government systems and individual
outposts like your personal laptop.
Becoming a citizen of cyberspace is as simple as obtaining access to the
Internet. Bits and pieces of the web are managed by communication companies,
Internet service providers (ISPs), and an international organization that oversees
the issuance of
Internet protocol (IP) addresses and domains.
I don’t have time or space to name all of the things you can do on the Internet,
but I list a few in a moment. I can confidently say, as a journalist who’s been
involved with personal computers since their birth more than a quarter-century
ago, that almost none of these were even imagined back then: buying a car, sell-
ing a house, watching a movie, reading a book in a library 10,000 miles away,
finding a recipe, consulting a doctor . . . get the idea?
Electronic mail
For many people, electronic mail has all but replaced the neighborhood postal
carrier for most of the essential letters. We receive bills, mash notes, credit-card
statements, and even that most cherished of all postal items: junk mail.
E-mail is essentially a store-and-forward system. Here’s what that means: You
can send a message anytime and the recipient can pick it up whenever he is
online. Messages travel from your computer to a server at an ISP or a web site,
and is then routed from there to the server associated with the person you’re
addressing and on to its destination. The message moves at electronic speed,
minus the generally insignificant time it takes to navigate through traffic jams at
various routing sites. For that reason, physical distance makes little difference;
when I send a message or a file by e-mail to a co-worker at her desk 10 feet away
from me, my message (broken up into small packets that travel on their own and
are reassembled at the recipient) takes a couple of dozen hops up and a couple
of dozen hops down before it arrives.
(Just for giggles, I decided to use one of the many
trace utilities you can find on
the Internet to see the path from my office in Massachusetts to the location of
the computer that holds www.hudsondreams.com, one of the web sites I own.
The report showed that there were 30 different handoffs that began near my
office, eventually going through New York City, Washington, D.C., Dallas, Kansas
City, and eventually arriving in Wayne, Pennsylvania. Total time: 71ms, or just
shy of a tenth of a second from here to there.)
Going Through Windows — Hitting the Internet 21
03_240564-ch01.qxp 7/23/08 8:28 PM Page 21