internship ppt on smartinternz platform as salesforce developer
Activity 13 common online terminologies
1. The Power
of Internet
Common Online Terminologies
Ci a n a J e l e n a P.
J u r a d o
C o m p u t e r 1A
Un i v e r s i t y o f
2. Internet
• The Internet is a global system of interconnected
computer networks that use the standard Internet
protocol suite (TCP/IP) to serve several billion
users worldwide.
• It can also make our works and researches more
easier.
• It is also consist of public, private, government
network, etc. that we can be link to.
• This sites have their own common online
terminologies.
4. EMAIL
• Email or originally called Electronic Mail is a
method of sending a message digitally to a
person from another.
• One of the examples is the Yahoo! Mail and
the Google Mail.
• The “@” symbol is the one being use for the
email accounts.
• Modern email operates across the Internet or
other computer networks.
5. Blog
• Blog is a discussion or informational site
published on the World Wide Web and consisting
of discrete entries typically displayed in reverse
chronological order.
• Twitter and Tumblr are examples of blog sites.
• Twitter is somehow a blog site even though it has
limited character you can type on, it has also
compilation of “tweets” that can show what is your
mood is.
6. Online Chat
• Online chat ay refer to any kind of
communication over the Internet that offers a
real-time transmission of text messages from
sender to receiver.
• One of the suggested site to this kind of
communication are Yahoo! Messenger and
Skype.
• Now a days, online chat is not only chatting
with your friends but you can also view them
by connecting your “webcams” to your
system.
7. Social Bookmarking
• A social bookmarking service is a
centralized online service which enables
users to add, annotate, edit, and share
bookmarks of web documents.
• The UST eLeap is a perfect example for this
in posting and downloading some files,
documents, PowerPoint presentations that
can be use in some activities and discussion.
8. URL
• The URL or the uniform resource locator,
is a specific character string that constitutes a
reference to a resource.
• An example of a typical URL would be
"http://en.example.org/wiki/Main_Page".
• In most web browsers, the URL of a web
page is displayed on top inside an address
bar.
9. Streaming
• Streaming media is multimedia that is constantly received
by and presented to an end-user while being delivered by a
provider.
• Its verb form, "to stream", refers to the process of delivering
media in this manner; the term refers to the delivery
method of the medium rather than the medium itself.
• Live streaming, which refers to content delivered live over
the Internet, requires a camera for the media, an encoder
to digitize the content, a media publisher, and a content
delivery network to distribute and deliver the content.
10. Podcast
• A podcast or netcast is a digital medium consisting of
an episodic series of audio, video, PDF, or ePub files
subscribed to and downloaded through web
syndication or streamed online to a computer or
mobile device.
• Communities use collaborative podcasts to support
multiple contributors podcasting through generally
simplified processes, and without having to host their
own individual feeds. A community podcast can also
allow members of the community (related to the
podcast topic) to contribute to the podcast in many
different ways.
11. VolP
• Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) is a
methodology and group of technologies for
the delivery of voice communications and
multimedia sessions over Internet Protocol
(IP) networks, such as the Internet.
• VoIP systems employ session control and
signaling protocols to control the signaling,
set-up, and tear-down of calls.
12. Wiki
• A wiki is usually a web application which allows
people to add, modify, or delete content in
collaboration with others.
• Text is usually written using a simplified markup
language or a rich-text editor. While a wiki is a
type of content management system, it differs from
a blog or most other such systems in that the
content is created without any defined owner or
leader, and wikis have little implicit structure,
allowing structure to emerge according to the
needs of the users.
13. Social Networking
• A social network is a social structure made
up of a set of social actors (such as
individuals or organizations) and a set of the
dyadic ties between these actors.
• The study of these structures uses social
network analysis to identify local and global
patterns, locate influential entities, and
examine network dynamics.
14. WWW
• The World Wide Web (abbreviated as
WWW or W3, commonly known as the
web) is a system of interlinked hypertext
documents accessed via the Internet.
• It is a collection of text documents and
other resources, linked by hyperlinks and
URLs, usually accessed by web browsers
from web servers.
15. HTML
• HTML or HyperText Markup Language is the
main markup language for creating web pages
and other information that can be displayed in a
web browser.
• The purpose of a web browser is to read HTML
documents and compose them into visible or
audible web pages.
• HTML elements form the building blocks of all
websites. HTML allows images and objects to be
embedded and can be used to create interactive
forms.
16. Web Feed
• A web feed (or news feed) is a data format
used for providing users with frequently
updated content.
• A web feed is also sometimes referred to as a
syndicated feed.
• The kinds of content delivered by a web feed
are typically HTML (webpage content) or
links to webpages and other kinds of digital
media.
19. Ou r
g e n e r a t i o n
h a s a f u r t h e r
k n o wl e d g e
a b o u t t h i s . We
s h o u l d b e
a w a r e o f s o me
d i s a d v a n t a g e s
o f s o me o f t h e