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RealTime Communication on the Internet

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Title: RealTime Communication on the Internet


1
Real-Time Communication onthe Internet
Tutorial 6
  • Communicating in Real-Time and Exploring
    Wireless Networks

2
Objectives
  • Learn different ways to chat on the Internet.
  • Explore different chat client programs.
  • Find chat rooms devoted to specific topics.
  • Explore businesses that let you create your own
    chat rooms.
  • Learn about and explore virtual communities and
    their use in business.

3
Objectives
  • Explore the history of the wireless Internet.
  • Learn about different wireless networks.
  • Locate wireless devices that let you access the
    Internet.
  • Evaluate wireless carriers in the United States.
  • Learn about wireless broadband networks.

4
What Is Chat?
  • Chat a general term for real-time communication
    that occurs over the Internet.
  • Originally, the term chat described the act of
    users exchanging typed messages, or a text chat.
  • Voice Chat where participants speak to each
    other in real time, much like they would be using
    a telephone.
  • Video Chat where participants can see and speak
    to each other.

5
What Is Chat?
  • Private Chat occurs between individuals who
    know each other and are invited to participate in
    the chat.
  • Public Chat occurs in a public area, sometimes
    called a chat room, in which people come and go.
  • Chats can be continuous, with participants
    entering and leaving ongoing discussions or they
    can be planned for a specific time and to last
    for a specific duration.

6
What Is Chat?
  • Most chat tools allow users to save a transcript
    of the chat session for future reference.
  • The practice of reading messages and not
    contributing to the discussion is called
    lurking.
  • Chatting requires participants to type quickly,
    therefore, chat participants often omit
    capitalization and do not worry about proper
    spelling and grammar.

7
Commonly Used Chat Acronyms
8
What Is Chat?
  • Flaming when a participant insults or ridicules
    another participant.
  • Spamming when someone or an organization sends
    unsolicited and irrelevant messages to a chat
    room.
  • Although many chat rooms dont enforce the rules
    of netiquette, as you use the Internet to
    communicate, you should exercise common courtesy
    and respect as you would when speaking in person
    with other people.

9
Internet Relay Chat
  • Early UNIX computers included a program called
    Talk that allowed users to exchange short text
    messages.
  • In 1988, Jarkko Oikarinen wrote a communications
    program that extended the capabilities of the
    Talk program to multi-user. It was called
    Internet Relay Chat (IRC).
  • IRC uses a client-server network model IRC
    servers are connected through the internet to
    form an IRC network.
  • Individual chat participants use IRC clients that
    connect to the servers in the network.

10
Internet Relay Chat
  • The original network was EFNet, which is still
    one of the largest IRC networks today.
  • Other major IRC networks include IRCNet,
    Undernet, DALnet, and NewNet.
  • Servers in each of these IRC networks are
    connected to each other as part of the Internet,
    but IRC traffic is segregated by network.

11
Independent IRC Networkson the Internet
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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12
Internet Relay Chat
  • IRC networks organize their chats by topic.
  • Each topic area is called a channel, and
    participants who connect to an IRC network join
    specific channels in which they conduct their
    chats.
  • Each channel has a name, or a channel heading,
    that uses the pound sign () to indicate the
    chats topic.
  • When a participant creates a new channel, he
    becomes responsible for managing the channel and
    is called the channel operator, channel op, or
    IRCop.

13
Internet Relay Chat
  • The channel operator can change the channels
    topic and heading at any time, determines which
    users may participate in the channel, and can
    change whether the channel is public or private.
  • Participants select nicknames when they log on to
    an IRC server. Nicknames must be unique.
  • A channel operators nickname is preceded by _at_.
  • IRC servers run automated programs, called IRC
    robots or bots, which perform routine services on
    the IRC network.

14
Commonly Used IRC Commands
15
Chat in Progress Using ICQ
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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16
Instant Messaging Software
  • Instant messaging software lets two users chat in
    real time over the Internet.
  • Instant messages usually occur between people who
    know each other, and are especially popular with
    friends and families separated by geographic
    distances.
  • The software has built-in tools that let you
    identify your friends and alert you when your
    friends are online.

17
Instant Messaging Software
  • Instant messaging is different from e-mail in two
    important ways
  • When you send an e-mail message to a user, you do
    not have a way to determine if that user is
    online at the time you send your message.
  • When you send an instant message, the instant
    messaging software identifies whether the
    intended recipient is online before you send the
    message.

18
Instant Messaging Software
  • ICQ
  • Pronounced I seek you
  • One of the most popular instant messaging
    software programs
  • Created by Mirabilis, an Israeli company in 1996
  • AOL purchased the software in 1998 and offers it
    as freeware
  • AIM (AOL Instant Messenger)
  • Available to anyone, even those without an AOL
    account.
  • MSN Messenger/Windows Messenger
  • Yahoo! Messenger

19
Instant Messaging Software
  • You must use the same instant messaging software
    to chat with other users.
  • Some instant messaging software programs have
    options for logging on to your chat account using
    a Web page so you can use the software when you
    are away from your primary computer.
  • All instant messaging software programs have some
    features that work on wireless devices, such as
    cell phones.
  • All instant messaging software is free and
    requires an Internet connection, preferably a
    broadband connection.

20
Instant Messaging Software
Windows Messenger
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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21
Instant Messaging Software
Home page of Cerulean Studios, which produces
Trillian instant message software. Trillian
allows you to chat with people using different IM
software.
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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22
Web-Based Chat Sites
  • Web-based chat sites offer the same features as
    text-based IRC chat networks and instant
    messaging but are often easier to use and do not
    require users to download and install any
    software.
  • In Web-based chat, some users lurk and others
    have multiple conversations going at the same
    time.
  • The chat room identifies users as they speak with
    their user names.
  • Conversations are often open-ended and rarely
    follow the prescribed topic.

23
Web-Based Chat Sites
  • Most Web-based chat sites prohibit spam messages,
    the use of automated programs, profane and vulgar
    language, and threats to individuals.
  • Most sites require you to register before using
    their chat rooms.
  • Although Web sites that provide chat rooms have
    rules of appropriate conduct, you might encounter
    conversations taking place that are offensive to
    you.

24
Web-Based Chat Sites
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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25
Finding Web Chat Sites
  • Use a directory that provides an organized list
    of chat site hyperlinks.
  • The descriptions for each hyperlink might tell
    you more about the nature of the chat to which it
    leads.
  • Use a Web search engine and include the word
    chat in the search expression.

26
Creating a Chat Room
  • Use the features at a portal site such as Yahoo!
    Chat to create your own chat room.
  • Easy, inexpensive, and usually includes tools
    that let you give access to only those people you
    want to participate in the chat that you create.
  • Several businesses offer services that support
    the different situations in which an organization
    might need to conduct a private, moderated chat.

27
Sharing Information in Virtual Communities
  • Virtual community a place on the Internet where
    people can gather to discuss issues and share
    information.
  • Types of virtual communities
  • online social networks
  • online business networks
  • online political networks

28
Online Social Networks
  • Virtual communities that exist for the sole
    purpose of being a community.
  • Useful tools for persons who want to make new
    local friends, establish acquaintances before
    moving to a new location, or obtain advice of
    various kinds.
  • Rely on advertising to generate revenue.
  • Some of the sites charge, or plan in the near
    future to charge, a monthly membership fee.
  • Other sites plan to charge for specific site
    features.

29
Online Business Networks
  • Focus on business networking.
  • Users log on to seek jobs, find potential
    business partners, recruit workers, and engage in
    other business development activities.
  • Users are looking for specific solutions to their
    problems.
  • Online business networks tend to use categories
    that reflect specific interests and try to make
    it easy for business persons to find exactly the
    connections they need, quickly and efficiently.

30
Online Political Networks
  • Used in the 2004 U.S. elections to rally
    supporters, raise funds, and get their messages
    out to voters.
  • Provide a place for people interested in a
    candidate or an issue to communicate with each
    other.
  • These sites allow people to discuss issues, plan
    strategies, and arrange in-person meetings called
    meetups.

31
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • When you connect to your Internet service
    provider, youre creating a wired connection.
  • A wireless connection occurs when data, such as a
    persons voice, is transferred to another
    location without the use of any wires.
  • In 1994, carriers created digital networks, or
    Personal Communication Service (PCS), where data
    was carried in bits at a rate of up to 14.4 Kbps.

32
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • The year 1999 saw the introduction of the first
    wireless connections to the Internet.
  • Personal digital assistant (PDA) a handheld
    computer that can send and receive wireless
    telephone and fax calls, act as a personal
    organizer, perform calculations, store notes, and
    download Web pages formatted for handheld
    devices.
  • The wireless Internet has expanded to include
    different hardware devices, networks, and other
    options.

33
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • Cell phones were one of the first wireless
    connections to transfer a persons voice.
  • Text messaging occurs over second-generation
    wireless systems, or 2G wireless.
  • Short Message Service (SMS) lets you send text
    messages of up to 160 characters over a 2G
    wireless network to a wireless phone.
  • SMS is slow and you must have a network
    connection to receive the data.

34
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • Some handheld computers use Infrared technology
    to beam information from one source to another
    without the use of wired connections.
  • Over 60 major U.S. markets have new 3G wireless
    systems (third-generation wireless) in place.
    Some European countries are building and
    licensing 3G wireless systems.
  • 3G wireless systems offer data transfer rates of
    up to 2 Mbps and constant connections.
  • Bandwidth and cost are two obstacles for getting
    3G wireless systems going in the United States.

35
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • The conversion from 2G to 3G wireless requires
    the carriers to invest in technology to make the
    change.
  • Many carriers have transformed and upgraded their
    existing networks by creating 2.5G wireless
    systems.
  • There isnt a single network standard.
  • A wireless device is manufactured to work only on
    a single type of network, because different
    networks use different frequencies in the radio
    spectrum.
  • If you choose a wireless carrier with a 2.5G
    network, for example, you will not be able to
    receive a signal in an area with only a 2G or a
    3G network because your device operates on a
    different frequency.

36
Evolution of Wireless Networks
  • 3.5G wireless networks use a new network protocol
    called Universal Mobile Telephone Service (UMTS),
    which is an extension of the existing W-CDMA
    network, to provide network connections of up to
    10 Mbps.
  • Fourth-generation wireless networks (4G
    wireless)
  • also called 3G wireless and beyond networks
  • 4G technology is expected to bring network
    connection speeds of up to 100 Mbps and deliver
    high quality audio and video to connected devices

37
Wireless Local Area Networking
  • Wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi) a trademarked name of
    the Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance
    (WECA) that specifies the interface between a
    wireless client and a base station or between two
    wireless clients.
  • Wireless local area network (WLAN) a network in
    which devices use high frequency radio waves
    instead of wires to communicate.
  • Wi-Fi operates in the 2.4 GHz radio spectrum,
    which is the same spectrum used by cordless
    phones, garage door openers, microwave ovens, and
    other devices.
  • because this spectrum is unlicensed, it is free
  • the 3G wireless spectrum needs to be licensed

38
Wireless Local Area Networking
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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39
Wireless Local Area Networking
  • Three of the most widely used standards for WLANs
    are 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g.
  • Transfer rate the speed at which data is
    transmitted from an access point (or base
    station) to the wireless device.
  • Access point a hardware device with one or more
    antennae that permits communication between wired
    and wireless networks so wireless clients can
    send and receive data.
  • Range physical distance between the access
    point and the wireless device.

40
Wireless Local Area Networking
  • Wi-Fi usually refers to the 802.11b specification
    which is the specification on which most Wi-Fi
    devices operate.
  • Dual access point a new device that makes the
    802.11a and 802.11b wireless standards and the
    802.11b and 802.11 g wireless standards
    interoperable.
  • Wi-Fi is often used as an alternative in an
    office building or other area in which you might
    find a traditional wired local area network. It
    can be used where wiring cannot be installed.

41
Wireless Local Area Networking
  • Laptop computers and other devices must have
    Wi-Fi compatible hardware installed in them to
    send and receive data with the network.
  • Once you have a network interface card or other
    Wi-Fi compatible device, you can connect to the
    WLAN via that device, provided that it is
    physically within the area covered by the
    network.
  • If you position enough access points within the
    appropriate range of each other, the WLAN can
    grow to cover an entire office complex or
    geographic area.

42
Personal Area Networking
  • Personal area networking refers to the wireless
    network that you use to connect personal devices
    to each other.
  • There are two major types of personal area
    networks Infrared and Bluetooth.

43
Infrared Technology
  • The Infrared Data Association (IrDA) a group
    dedicated to developing low-cost, high-speed
    wireless connectivity solutions.
  • Using infrared technology, you can wirelessly
    beam information from one device to another
    compatible device using Infrared light waves.
  • This technology is used with PDAs, notebook
    computers, printers, phones, and other peripheral
    devices.
  • A disadvantage is the lack of software products
    that can handle the transfer. The devices and the
    software that runs them must be compatible with
    each other.

44
Bluetooth
  • Bluetooth a technology that provides short-range
    radio links between personal computers, handheld
    devices, wireless phones, headsets, printers, and
    other electronic devices.
  • For devices without chipsets that enable them to
    receive Bluetooth radio waves you can purchase an
    adapter to enable use with other Bluetooth
    devices.
  • Bluetooth doesnt need an access point for
    communication devices communicate with each
    other automatically.
  • Bluetooth isnt really owned by any specific
    manufacturer or group.

45
Bluetooth
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EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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Bluetooth
  • Using Bluetooth technology, you can synchronize
    and share data between as many as eight Bluetooth
    compatible devices within the specified range at
    a rate of up to 1 Mbps.
  • A collection of devices connected via Bluetooth
    technology is called a piconet. A piconet can
    connect to eight devices at a time.
  • You can use Bluetooth-enabled devices to transfer
    files, listen to music playing on a computer
    through a headset, print documents, or connect
    your notebook computer to the Internet using a
    wireless phone that is in your desk drawer or
    briefcase.

47
Comparing Wireless Network Standards and Bluetooth
48
Wireless Wide Area Networking
  • Wireless device connections let you access the
    Internet on a PDA, wireless phone, or notebook
    computer from anywhere in the world without a
    wired connection.
  • A WLAN provides a wireless connection to a
    network, but devices must be within the stated
    boundary of the WLAN.
  • In 2.5G and 3G wireless systems, wireless wide
    area networking (WWAN) makes it possible to
    access the Internet from anywhere within the
    boundaries of the wireless network to which you
    are connected.

49
Creating a Wireless Wide Area Network
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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50
Using Wireless Devicesto Access the Internet
  • The technology and standards that dictate what
    you can accomplish with a wireless device change
    on a daily basis.
  • New standards emerge, new hardware is created,
    and new ways of connectivity arrive.
  • Select a wireless solution that has the locations
    in which the technology will be used in its
    network coverage area and that supports the
    features you plan to use.

51
Metropolitan Area Networking WiMAX
  • WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave
    Access) uses 802.16 wireless network standard
    being developed for use in metropolitan areas.
  • Metropolitan area network (MAN) provides
    wireless broadband Internet access via radio
    signals in the 2 to 11 GHz and 10 to 66 GHz radio
    spectrum with a range of up to 31 miles and
    speeds of up to 70 Mbps.
  • When multiple WiMAX towers are connected to each
    other, WiMAX has the potential to solve some of
    the geographical and speed limitations of wired
    networks and other wireless networks, including
    Wi-Fi.

52
Metropolitan Area Networking WiMAX
  • WiMAX provides broadband Internet connections at
    the same speed as DSL and cable, but through
    wireless radio connections.
  • WiMAX works by connecting a WiMAX tower to an ISP
    that provides the Internet service.
  • The WiMAX towers are connected to each other via
    radio signals.
  • WiMAX transmitters, which can be located up to 31
    miles from the towers, send the signal to homes
    and businesses that have WiMAX receivers.
  • Businesses can plug the WiMAX receiver into their
    existing local area networks to provide
    high-speed Internet access to all of their
    connected devices.

53
Metropolitan Area Networking WiMAX
New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth
EditionComprehensive Tutorial 6
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54
Metropolitan Area Networking WiMAX
  • VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) converts
    audio signals to digital packets so that you can
    use a broadband wired or wireless Internet
    connection to make local and long distance
    telephone calls.
  • Because WiMAX can support many types of data
    transmissions, it is also used for VoIP.
  • Most experts predict that all new desktop and
    notebook computers and wireless devices will have
    built-in 802.16 cards by 2007.

55
Summary
  • There are different Internet resources to chat in
    real time with friends and business associates
  • There are different types of wireless networks,
    wireless network standards, and wireless
    devices.
  • When selecting a wireless device, make sure that
    you understand the features of the network on
    which that wireless device operates.
  • Carefully examine the networks geographic
    coverage area, pricing options, and the
    providers future expansion plans before
    selecting the device that most closely matches
    the functions that you need it to perform.
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