Exploring Internet Geography - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Exploring Internet Geography

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using traceroute utility to explore and map Internet geography ... useful to expose some of network geopolitics. see how your data flows from point A to B ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Exploring Internet Geography


1
Exploring Internet Geography
3011 Geographies of Cyberspace
  • Martin Dodge
  • (m.dodge_at_ucl.ac.uk)
  • Practical 2, Friday 15th October 2004
  • http//www.casa.ucl.ac.uk/cyberspace

2
Todays practical
  • using traceroute utility to explore and map
    Internet geography
  • a bit of image editing using Photoshop
  • making a new web page of traceroute results using
    Dreamweaver

3
Exploring Internet geography yourself
  • a number of interesting tools for measuring and
    monitoring the operation and traffic on the
    Internet, in real-time
  • useful to expose some of network geopolitics
  • see how your data flows from point A to B
  • tells you how many "hops", which routers are
    traversed
  • tells you how quickly things are moving
  • identifying problems, bottlenecks and blockages
  • try to tie this to geographic locations
  • also reveals which companys networks are
    traversed
  • you can see how complex routes through the
    Internet often are

4
Tracing the Internet
  • traceroute are utilities to explore the actual
    route data travels
  • traceroute utilities come in three basic types -
    simple text ones, graphical and geographical
  • its an imprecise science, particularly for
    geographic traceroutes
  • we are going to be using a geographical
    traceroute called VisualRoute
  • freely available on the web

5
(No Transcript)
6
Have a go at tracing the Internet yourself
  • first you need to choose some target places on
    the Internet to run traces to
  • you must choose 2 websites of geography
    departments in different parts of the world
  • choose 1 department from somewhere in Europe, and
    then 1 other departments in another continent
  • use the comprehensive listing of academic
    geography departments by Klaus Förster
    (University of Innsbruck) to make your selection

7
List of geography dept. web siteshttp//univ.cc/g
eolinks/simple.php
Watch out - occasionally some of the links are to
email address, not websites. Just ignore these
8
  • check that the websites of the 2 departments you
    chose are actually working by opening their
    homepage
  • I chose the University of Punjabs Department of
    Geography as an example

9
  • you want to note down just the domain name of
    your websites - http//this.bit.needed/blah/blah
  • so in my case www.pu.edu.pk
  • now you start up the traceroute program. using
    Internet Explorer (not Netscape), go to
  • http//visualroute.visualware.co.uk/
  • (this may take a while to fully load - please be
    patient)

10
  • first you need to register to use the service.
    enter your email address in the box and press
    Go!

11
  • you should see this window and wait a minute and
    check your email for a confirmation message from
    VisualRoute
  • click on the web link in the confirmation email

12
  • Now you should be ready to run a traceroute from
    Surrey, England, across the world to your chosen
    websites
  • In the Enter Host/URL box, enter the domain
    name of your first geography department
  • then press enter

13
The traceroute output
  • If you click on the snap button you can see the
    table of results more clearly in a pop-up window

14
Decoding your traceroute
  • how many hops were taken?
  • how many different countries did the data travel
    through?
  • how many different networks?
  • Is this the most direct route geographically?
  • at what point in the trace does the performance
    slow? Is this related to crossing an ocean?
  • now repeat the traceroute for the other geography
    departments
  • think about how the two traces differ. how does
    the number of hops in the trace correlate with
    geographic distance?

15
Making new web page of the traceroute result
  • choose the 1 of your traceroutes that has the
    most interesting geographical route
  • the results of this will be put on new web
  • this time you will focus on putting images into
    the web page
  • you will need to take screen shots of the
    geography department homepage and also the
    VisualRoute results page
  • to take a screenshot, simply use the PrtScn key
    on the keyboard. (top, right hand side)

16
Images on web pages
  • 3 formats of images that you can use - jpg, gif
    and png
  • jpg format images are good for photographs
  • gif is good for simple graphics and line art
  • png is good for complex graphics
  • we will use png format images today

17
Manipulating images
  • for the web you need to keep images relatively
    small, so they load fast (esp. for people at home
    on slow modems)
  • you need to crop and shrink images
  • you will use Photoshop Elements to do this. It is
    a specialised graphics application for
    manipulating images and photos
  • start Photoshop
  • go to Start button -gt Programs -gt Graphics
    Packages -gt Photoshop Elements

18
this is what you should see - Photoshop
19
  • now display VisualRoute showing the best
    traceroute full on screen and then press the Prt
    Scn key
  • switch to Photoshop and then go File -gt From
    Clipboard

the VisualRoute screen will now be in
Photoshop so you can alter it
20
  • crop the image to remove junk around the
    traceroute results part of the screen image
  • select the Crop tool and then click-and-drag to
    highlight the central portion of the image you
    need

the crop tool
  • when you are happy
  • with your selection,
  • right-click and Crop

21
this is what you should see, just an image of
the traceroute results
now you need to resize the traceroute image to
make a smaller version for your web page, go
Image -gt Resize -gt Image Size set the width to
about 300 pixels
22
now you must save the image. you need to save it
in your html.pub directory. This is at
R/html.pub
  • go File -gt Save As
  • the Filename should be
  • traceroute.png
  • the Format must be PNG

you will be asked a final question about PNG
Options - choose None
23
  • now you need to capture the screen of the
    geography department page (PrtScn)
  • paste this into Photoshop, just as before
  • (you probably do not need to crop this image)
  • resize the image, to about 300 pixel width and
    then save it into your html.pub directory called
    homepage.png.
  • now you have your images ready for the web. you
    can quit Photoshop

24
Making a traceroute web page
  • you are going to make a fancy new web page of the
    traceroute results
  • start Dreamweaver
  • set the page title for your new page, to
    something like Traceroute, your name, 15th
    October 2004. (Modify -gt Page Properties)
  • save the web page to your html.pub directory.
    call the new file traceroute.html
  • now add a large title at the top of the page.
    choose a nice font/colour for the title

25
next you need to insert a table for the 2
images. the table should have 1 row and 2
columns width is 95
Traceroute from Surrey England to Punjab, Pakistan
26
put the cursor in the left hand cell of the table
and then click on the Insert Image button. In the
html.pub directory choose the traceroute.png
file
Traceroute from Surrey England to Punjab, Pakistan
27
  • next, add in the webpage.png image into the
    right hand cell of the table
  • underneath the table of the 2 images, write a
    couple of lines describing the geography of the
    data path and the different networks traversed in
    the trace
  • now you are ready to add some hyperlinks
  • you need to hyperlink the traceroute image to
    http//visualroute.visualware.co.uk and the
    homepage image to actual web page. you add the
    URLs into the Link box on the toolbar

28
  • in the description of the traceroute you wrote
    under the images, hyperlink the name of the
    geography department to their homepage
  • preview your web page now to see how it is
    displayed in a browser (File -gt Preview in
    Browser)
  • when you are happy with the page design, save it
    again (in your html.pub directory)

29
  • just like for your cv web page, you now need to
    run a program to make traceroute.html visible
    on the web
  • go to Start button -gt Programs -gt Internet
    Software -gt Publish Web Pages
  • remember to type in your username and password
    carefully

30
  • your traceroute web page should now be online
  • open the page in web browser, it will be at
  • http//www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/xxxxxxx/traceroute
    .html
  • (where xxxxxxx is your username)
  • For example, here is a version that I created
    last year
  • http//www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/ucfnmad/traceroute
    .html
  • email me the address of your web page so I can
    check it
  • (m.dodge_at_ucl.ac.uk)

31
Going a bit further
  • some optional extras for the speedy people
  • try out the Mapnet tool and see if you can find
    any of the networks used in your traceroute
  • www.caida.org/tools/visualization/mapnet/
  • see if you can find the corporate website of one
    of the networking companies in your traceroute
    and see if you can find a map of their network
    infrastructure
  • why not add more images to your traceroute web
    page showing any interesting network maps youve
    been able to find?
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