Table of Contents
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Z
A
@ - Used in an email
address, the @ sign joins a username on the left with the server that hosts the
electronic mailbox. It is also sometimes used in defining mail exchange records
(see MX Record). The @ sign is now the standard protocol worldwide for email
addresses.
Additional email -
Additional email addresses (in addition to the primary) for a domain. The price
is currently set at $5 per year per additional email.
A record - IP address
Pointer.
Abuse - Generic term used
to complain about or describe spamming.
Ad banner - A graphic or
a banner on a webpage that when clicked on, takes the surfer to another
site.
Ad Clicks - A click on an
advertisement on a website that takes a surfer to another site.
Ad Views (Impressions) -
The number of times an ad banner is downloaded and presumably seen by visitors.
If the same ad appears on multiple pages simultaneously, this statistic may
understate the number of ad impressions, due to browser caching.
Address Verification System
(AVS) - A service provided by a processor that offers additional features to
validate the purchaser as the rightful cardholder by verifying whether the
address submitted by the purchaser matches the billing address on file with a
credit card company.
ASP - Stands for Active
Server Pages. A specification for a Web page that is dynamically created by the
webserver and contains both HTML and scripting code. With ASP, programs can be
run on a webserver in a similar way to CGI scripts, but ASP uses the ActiveX
scripting engine to support either VBScript or JScript. When a user requests
data from an Active Server Page, the ActiveX server engine reads through the
file, sends the HTML back to the browser and executes the script. Active Server
Pages were first available on the Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS)
3.0. They have the .ASP filename extension.
Authorization - The
process of verifying that a credit card has sufficient funds (credit) available
to cover the amount of the transaction. The authorization also validates the
credit card. An authorization is obtained for every sale.
B
Backbone - A high-speed
line or series of connections that forms a large pathway within a network. The
term is relative to the size of the network it is serving. A backbone in a small
network would probably be much smaller than many non-backbone lines in a large
network.
Bandwidth - The amount of
information (text, images, video, sound) that can be sent through a connection.
Usually measured in bits-per-second. A full page of text is about 16,000 bits. A
fast modem can move approximately 15,000 bits in one second.
Batch - A collection of
credit card transactions saved for submitting at one time, usually each day.
Batch fees are charged to encourage a merchant to submit his or her transactions
at one time, rather than throughout the day. At directNIC, batches are
performed daily at 10 pm.
BBS - Bulletin Board
System. 1. A computerized version of the bulletin boards found in stores and
other public places, where people can leave messages and advertise things they
want to buy or sell. Local computer user groups often run BBSs, and offer
downloads of shareware and freeware plus online information and services. There
are special interest bulletin boards, including those run by computer companies
to provide information on their products. Many BBSs now have web pages. 2. In
chat, it stands for "Be Back soon."
BIN - A MacBinary II
encoded file (filename extension). This file type, downloaded as MacBinary or
Binary, can be decompressed with Stuffit Expander.
BMP - Bitmap image file
typically used with windows.
Bookmark - Ability to add
a URL to a list of favorites on a browser.
Broadband - Broadband
refers to telecommunication that provides multiple channels of data over a
single communications medium (i.e. DSL, Cable internet connections).
Browser - A program used
to locate and view HTML documents (Netscape or Microsoft Explorer, for
example.)
Browser Caching - To
speed surfing, browsers store recently used pages on a user's disk. If a site is
revisited, browsers display pages from the disk instead of requesting them from
the server. As a result, servers undercount the number of times a page is
viewed.
C
C++ (CPP, C Plus Plus, or
C++) - A programming language.
CA - Certificate
Authority. A Certificate Authority is a company that is authorized to issue,
renew, and revoke digital certificates after verifying the identity and
legitimacy of the requesting party through a registration authority.
Cable Modem - A cable
modem is a device that enables you to hook up your PC to a local cable TV line
and receive data at about 1.5 Mbps . This data rate far exceeds that of the
prevalent 28.8 and 56 Kbps telephone modems and the up to 128 Kbps of Integrated
Services Digital Network (ISDN) and is about the data rate available to
subscribers of Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) telephone service. A cable modem
can be added to or integrated with a set-top box that provides your TV set with
channels for Internet access. In most cases, cable modems are furnished as part
of the cable access service and are not purchased directly and installed by the
subscriber. The actual bandwidth for Internet service over a cable TV line is up
to 27 Mbps on the download path to the subscriber with about 2.5 Mbps of
bandwidth for interactive responses in the other direction. However, since the
local provider may not be connected to the Internet on a line faster than a
T-carrier system at 1.5 Mpbs, a more likely data rate will be close to 1.5
Mpbs.
Cache - A temporary
storage area for frequently accessed or recently accessed data. Having certain
data stored in cache, speeds up the operation of the computer. There are two
kinds of cache: internal (or memory cache) and external (or disk cache).
Internal cache is built into the CPU, and external cache is on the motherboard.
When an item is called for, the computer first checks the internal cache, then
the external cache, and finally the slower, main storage. A cache hit (accessing
data from a cache) takes much less time than retrieving information from the
main memory; the cache has high-speed memory chips. The cache may also be used
as a temporary storage area for data that will be written to disk when the
computer is idle.
Canonical - conforming to
a general rule or acceptable procedure.
Central Registry -
VeriSign Global Registry Services (http://www.nsiregistry.com) (VeriSign GRS)
is the leading provider of domain name registry services and Domain Name System
(DNS) support to the Internet. The division maintains the definitive directory
of over 30 million .com, .net, and .org Web addresses and is responsible for the
infrastructure that propagates this information throughout the Internet and
responds to over 1.5 billion DNS look-ups daily.
CGI - Common Gateway
Interface is a special type of UNIX program that allows a web server to access
an application and transfer the information to your display. An
interface-creation scripting program that allows Web pages to be made on the
fly, based on information from buttons, checkboxes, text input, etc.
Chargeback - A fee
charged by a merchant services provider against a merchant account for
transactions that are successfully challenged by a credit card holder. After a
charge is disputed and adjudicated in the cardholder's favor, the transaction
total and chargeback fee are deducted from the merchant account.
Chat Room - A place on
the Internet where people go to "chat" with other people. The "rooms" are
usually organized by topics.
Click Through Rate -
Percentage of users who click on a viewed advertisement. This is an indication
of the effectiveness of an ad.
Client - The browser used
by a visitor to a website.
Close - The process of
sending the batch for settlement.
CNAME - The canonical
name for an alias.
Commerce Server - A Web
server that contains the software necessary for processing customer orders via
the Web, including shopping cart programs, dynamic inventory databases, and
online payment systems. Commerce servers are also usually secure
servers.
Complainant - means the
party initiating a complaint concerning a domain-name registration.
Compression - A
technology that reduces the size of a file to help save both time and
bandwidth.
Content - Content is any
information viewable on the Internet, including graphics such as a bar chart of
company sales, or a photograph of a museum piece. Content can be lists of Web
addresses of other sites of interest to the reader. It can be just texts.
Cookies - A cookie is a
set of data that a website server gives to a browser the first time the user
visits the site that is updated with each return visit. The remote server saves
the information the cookie contains about the user and the user's browser does
the same, as a text file stored in the Netscape or Explorer system folder. Not
all browsers support cookies. Cookies store information, such as username and
password and what parts of the site were visited. This information can be
updated with each visit. The browser only shares each cookie with the server
that originated it; other servers can only read their own cookies. Netscape can
be set up to alert the user when a cookie is being sent, so the user can accept
it or not, by means of the Network Preferences window. There are also
downloadable applications that eat cookies such as Cookie Killers, Cookie
Monster (Mac), and Kill Cookie Batch File (PC). Counter - A number on Web pages
that displays the amount of hits or counts the times the page has been accessed.
In other words, it counts the number of people that have visited that page.
CPM - CPM is the cost per
thousand for a particular site. A website that charges $15,000 per banner and
guarantees 600,000 impressions has a CPM of $25 ($15,000 divided by 600).
Credit Card Processors -
Merchant services providers that handle the details of processing credit card
transactions between merchants, issuing banks, and merchant account providers.
Website operators usually must first establish their own merchant account before
contracting for credit card processing services.
CSR - Certificate Signing
Request. A CSR is a text file, generated through a web server that is submitted
to the Certificate Authority during the digital certificate application process
and used to generate a signed digital certificate identifying information about
the company applying for the digital certificate.
Cybermarketing - Any type
of Internet-based promotion, including website promotion through websites,
targeted email, and Internet bulletin boards.
Cyberspace - A metaphor
for describing the non-physical terrain created by computer systems. Online
systems, for example, create a cyberspace within which people can communicate
with one another (via e-mail), do research, or simply window shop. Like physical
space, cyberspace contains objects (files, mail messages, graphics, etc.) and
different modes of transportation and delivery. Unlike real space, though,
exploring cyberspace does not require any physical movement other than pressing
keys on a keyboard or moving a mouse. Some programs, particularly computer
games, are designed to create a special cyberspace, one that resembles physical
reality in some ways but defies it in others. In its extreme form, called
virtual reality, users are presented with visual, auditory, and even tactile
feedback that makes cyberspace feel real. The term was coined by author William
Gibson in his sci-fi novel Neuromancer (1984).
D
Daemon -- In the UNIX
operating system, a daemon is a background process that lies dormant waiting to
perform some useful tasks. The send mail daemon, for example, continually runs
but becomes active only when email is sent or received.
Database -- A file or
file system containing organized information and, most commonly, a filing and
retrieval system for storing information. Most database software also includes
tools for data analysis. Examples of database software include Oracle, Sybase,
Microsoft Access, Lotus Approach, Microsoft Access, Filemaker, dBASE, MySQL,
mSQL, Microsoft SQL. Debit Card - A financial instrument used by consumers in
place of cash. Unlike a credit card, debit card purchases are deducted
automatically from the cardholder's account.
DHTML - Dynamic HTML is a
collective term for a combination of new Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) tags
and options, that will let you create Web pages more animated and more
responsive to user interaction than previous versions of HTML. Much of dynamic
HTML is specified in HTML 4.0. Simple examples of dynamic HTML pages would
include (1) having the color of a text heading change when a user passes a mouse
over it or (2) allowing a user to "drag and drop" an image to another place on a
Web page. Dynamic HTML can allow Web documents to look and act like desktop
applications or multimedia productions. The biggest obstacle to the use of
dynamic HTML is that, since many users are still using older browsers, a Web
site must create two versions of each site and serve the pages appropriate to
each user's browser version.
Dial-up access - Refers
to connecting a device to a network via a modem and a public telephone network.
Dial-up access is really just like a phone connection, except that the parties
at the two ends are computer devices rather than people. Because dial-up access
uses normal telephone lines, the quality of the connection is not always good
and data rates are limited. In the past, the maximum data rate with dial-up
access was 56 Kbps (56,000 bits per second), but new technologies such as ISDN
are providing faster rates. An alternative way to connect two computers is
through a leased line, which is a permanent connection between two devices.
Leased lines provide faster throughput and better quality connections, but they
are also more expensive.
Dig - 1) (domain
information groper) is a flexible tool for interrogating DNS name servers. It
performs DNS lookups and displays the answers that are returned from the
nameserver(s) that were queried. Most DNS administra tors use dig to
troubleshoot DNS problems because of its flexibility, ease of use and clarity of
output. Other lookup tools tend to have less functionality than dig. Although
dig is normally used with command-line arguments, it also has a batch mode of
operation for reading lookup requests from a file. A brief summary of its
command-line arguments and options is printed when the -h option is given.
Unlike earlier versions, the BIND9 implementation of dig allows multiple lookups
to be issued from the command line. 2) What you do with a shovel.
Digital Wallet - A
consumer account setup to allow e-commerce transactions through a particular
credit card processing system. Before the consumer can make a purchase, he or
she must first establish an account with the credit card processor, who provides
an ID and password. These can then be used to make purchases at any website that
supports that transaction system. Discount Rate - A percentage fee paid to the
merchant account provider or ISO for handling an electronic transaction. Most
Web merchants pay between two and 10 percent of their revenue from online credit
card or electronic check orders.
DNS - 1) Short for Domain
Name System (or Service), an Internet service that translates domain names into
IP addresses. Because domain names are alphabetic, they're easier to remember.
The Internet however, is really based on IP addresses. Every time you use a
domain name, therefore, a DNS service must translate the name into the
corresponding IP address. For example, the domain name www.example.com might
translate to 198.105.232.4. The DNS system is, in fact, its own network. If one
DNS server doesn't know how to translate a particular domain name, it asks
another one, and so on, until the correct IP address is returned. 2) Short for
digital nervous system, a term coined by Bill Gates to describe a network Domain
Name - An Internet address in alphabetic form. Domain names must have at least 2
parts: the part on the left that names the organization, and the part on the
right that identifies the highest sub-domain, such as the country (fr for
France, uk for United Kingdom) or the type of organization (com for commercial;
edu for educational, etc.). Directory levels can be indicated in other parts.
The IP address is translated into the domain name by the domain name server
domains or to print a list of hosts in a domain.
Domain Parking - In the
Web hosting business, DNS parking is a service that the Web host will offer to
its clients as a way of securing a domain name for future use. The Web host
registers the domain name with a registrar such as directNIC and "parks" the
domain name on a server until it is ready to be made active. By doing this, the
Web host ensures the availability of the domain name for the client's future use
so that another individual or company cannot register that same domain
name.
Download - The transfer
of information from the Internet to your computer. Every time you instruct your
computer system to retrieve your mail, you are downloading your mail to your
computer. You may also download programs to your computer. However, be careful
about downloading files or programs from a site in which you are not familiar.
You could download a virus and not know it until it's too late.
DSL - DSL (Digital
Subscriber Line) is a technology for bringing high-bandwidth information to
homes and small businesses over ordinary copper telephone lines. xDSL refers to
different variations of DSL, such as ADSL, HDSL, and RADSL. Assuming your home
or small business is close enough to a telephone company central office that
offers DSL service, you may be able to receive data at rates up to 6.1 megabits
(millions of bits) per second (of a theoretical 8.448 megabits per second),
enabling continuous transmission of motion video, audio, and even 3-D effects.
More typically, individual connections will provide from 1.544 Mbps to 512 Kbps
downstream and about 128 Kbps upstream. A DSL line can carry both data and voice
signals and the data part of the line is continuously connected.
Dynamic DNS - When you
connect to the Internet, your ISP assigns you one of two types of machine
readable addresses: static or dynamic. A static address never changes. A dynamic
address changes every time you dial into the ISP and get on the net. So you may
(and probably will) have one address right now and another address next time you
dial in. The nameservers need to be told that it changed and this is where
dyndns (short for "dynamic name server") comes in. It automates the process of
advising the name servers that your IP has changed.
Dynamic - Performed while
a program is running. of personal computers that make it easier to obtain and
understand information
E
E-Commerce - The
processing of economic transactions, such as buying and selling, through
electronic communication. E-commerce often refers to transactions occurring on
the Internet, such as credit card purchases at websites.
Editor - Any program that
is used to write and modify text.
Electronic Data
Interchange - EDI is a global computer network, separate from the Internet,
used to handle financial transactions between banks and other
institutions.
Email - Electronic mail.
Your ISP usually provides this tool. It allows you to send and receive mail
(messages) over the Internet. Through email, you can write your friends, ask
your ISP a technical question about your service, or even receive an Internet
birthday card.
Email forwarding - To
have an email alias that "forwards" mail to an existing email
address.
Embedded hyperlink - a
hyperlink that is incorporated into a line of text.
Ethernet - The most
popular type of local area network, which sends its communications through radio
frequency signals carried by a coaxial cable. Each computer checks to see if
another computer is transmitting and waits its turn to transmit. If two
computers accidentally transmit at the same time and their messages collide,
they wait and send again in turn. Software protocols used by Ethernet systems
vary, but include Novell Netware and TCP/IP.
Expiration - the act of
coming to an end or the point at which something ends.
F
Factoring - The purchase
of debts owed, or "accounts receivable," in exchange for immediate payment at a
discount. In e-commerce, the term is often applied to ISOs that offer to process
credit card transactions through their own merchant account rather than through
an account established by the merchant, in exchange for a percentage of the
transaction or other fee. Factoring of credit card debt is illegal.
Filter - A means of
narrowing the scope of a report or view by specifying ranges or types of data to
include or exclude.
Firewall - An electronic
boundary that prevents unauthorized users from accessing certain files on a
network; or, a computer used to maintain such a boundary.
Forms - An HTML element
that passes variable data back to the server. Scripts on the server use these
variables to gather information from users.
FQDN - Stands for Fully
Qualified Domain Name: the full name of a system that contains its hostname and
domain name. (essentially is the nameserver itself
(ns.domainname.com))
Front End - The user
interface that appears on a Web page and allows a visitor to the site to
interact with dynamic features, including databases, shopping cart programs, and
online purchase processing software.
FTP - An acronym for File
Transfer Protocol. It's also the tool used to transfer files through the
Internet from one computer to another. For example, you would use an FTP to
upload your webpage from where you built it (like your computer at home) to a
website (like this one) so that all of your friends and neighbors can look at
it. Examples are CuteFTP, WsFTP, and FrontPage.
G
gif - Graphics
Interchange Format. A format used for displaying bitmap images on World Wide Web
pages, usually called a "gif" because .gif is the filename extension. These
files use loss-less compression and can have 256 colors. JPEG and GIF are
commonly used for images on the Web; JPEG is considered best for photos and GIF
for other graphic images.
Gross Exposures - Each
time a Web server sends a file to a browser, it is recorded in the server log
file as a "hit." Hits are generated for every element of a requested page
(including graphics, text and interactive items). If a user views a page
containing two graphics, three hits will be recorded: one for the page itself
and one for each graphic. Webmasters use hits to measure their server's
workload. Because page designs vary greatly, hits are a poor guide for traffic
measurement.
H
Hit - Each time a Web
server sends a file to a browser, it is recorded in the server log file as a
"hit." Hits are generated for every element of a requested page (including
graphics, text and interactive items). If a page containing two graphics is
viewed by a user, three hits will be recorded - one for the page itself and one
for each graphic. Webmasters use hits to measure their server's workload.
Because page designs vary greatly, hits are a poor guide for traffic
measurement.
Holdback - A portion of
the revenue from a merchant's credit card transactions, held in reserve by the
merchant account provider to cover possible disputed charges, chargeback fees,
and other expenses. After a predetermined time, holdbacks are turned over to the
merchant. Note: Merchant account providers almost never pay interest on
holdbacks.
Hot Linking - The
function of linking between two applications where as the changes in one will
effect the other. Such as linking an image from another application (or server)
to view in an application in different location. The process of linking two
seperate applications.
Home Page - The main page
of a website. The home page provides visitors with an overview and links to the
rest of the site. It often contains or links to a Table of Contents for the
site.
Host - An Internet host
used to be a single machine connected to the Internet (which meant it had a
unique IP address). As a host, it made certain services available to other
machines on the network. However virtual hosting has now meant that one physical
host can now be actually many virtual hosts.
HQX - BinHex (filename
extension -- Macintosh).
Htaccess - password
authentication scheme for websites on apache servers.
HTML - Stands for Hyper
Text Markup Language, a coding language used to make hypertext documents for use
on the Web. HTML resembles old-fashioned typesetting code, where a block of text
is surrounded by codes that indicate how it should appear. HTML allows text to
be "linked" to another file on the Internet.
HTTP - Stands for Hyper
Text Transfer Protocol, a standard method of transferring data between a Web
server and a Web browser.
Hyperlink - A link in a
HTML document that leads to another World Wide website, or another place within
the same document. Hyperlinks are usually underlined or shown in a different
color from the surrounding text. Sometimes hyperlinks are pictures.
Hypertext - Any text that
causes another document to be retrieved and displayed when clicked
on.
I
IANA - Internet Assigned
Numbers Authority. http://www.iana.org
IAP - Short for Internet
Access Provider, a company that provides access to the Internet. IAPs generally
provide dial-up access through a modem and PPP connection, though companies that
offer Internet access with other devices, such as cable modems or wireless
connections, could also be considered IAPs. The terms IAPs and ISP (Internet
Service Providers) are often used interchangeably, though some people consider
IAPs to be a subset of ISPs. Whereas IAPs offer only Internet access, ISPs may
provide additional services, such as leased lines (T-1 or T-3) and Web
development. In contrast to both IAPs and ISPs, online services provide their
own proprietary content in addition to Internet access.
ICANN - The Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN located at http://www.icann.org) is the governing body for
domain names and also operates the root servers. They determine what TLDs are
available, how domain name disputes are handled, and other policies regarding
the domain name system.
ICQ - A program which
allows chat and the exchange of other types of information, plus there are
add-on programs for "telephone" conversations. "ICQ" is said to derive from "I
seek you" (say it aloud if you don't get it). A good way to find out if your
friends are online and want to chat is for all to download and install
ICQ.
IM - Instant messaging
(sometimes called IM or IMing) is the ability to easily see whether a chosen
friend or co-worker is connected to the Internet and, if they are, to exchange
messages with them. Instant messaging differs from ordinary e-mail in the
immediacy of the message exchange and also makes a continued exchange simpler
than sending e-mail back and forth. Most exchanges are text-only. However, some
services allow attachments. Independent Service Organization - A firm or
organization that offers to process online credit card transactions, usually in
exchange for transaction fees or a percentage of sales. Merchants must generally
establish a merchant account before contracting for ISO services, although some
ISOs claim not to require separate merchant accounts. See also
factoring.
Internet Service Provider
(ISP)- A firm that provides access to the Internet, including Web browsing and
email. ISPs often offer connections that can be accessed by dialing a telephone
number through your computer's modem.
Internet - A global
network connecting millions of computers. As of 1999, the Internet has more than
200 million users worldwide, and that number is growing rapidly. More than 100
countries are linked into exchanges of data, news and opinions. Unlike online
services, which are centrally controlled, the Internet is decentralized by
design. Each Internet computer, called a host, is independent. Its operators can
choose which Internet services to use and which local services to make available
to the global Internet community. Remarkably, this anarchy by design works
exceedingly well. There are a variety of ways to access the Internet. Most
online services, such as America Online, offer access to some Internet services.
It is also possible to gain access through a commercial Internet Service
Provider (ISP).
Intranet - A local area
network which may not be connected to the Internet, but which has some similar
functions. Some organizations setup World Wide Web servers on their own internal
networks so employees have access to the organization's Web
documents.
IP Address - Internet
Protocol address. Every system connected to the Internet has a unique IP
address, which consists of a number in the format A.B.C.D, where each of the
four sections is a decimal number from 0 to 255. Most people use Domain Names
instead, and the network and the Domain Name Servers handle the resolution
between Domain Names and IP addresses. With virtual hosting, a single machine
can act like multiple machines (with multiple domain names and IP
addresses).
IP - Internet Protocol.
The IP part of TCP/IP; the protocol that is used to route a data packet from its
source to its destination over the Internet.
IRC - Internet Relay Chat
is a worldwide network of people talking to each other in real time. These chat
rooms typically focus on specific topics, issues or commonality.
ISDN - Integrated
Services Digital Network is a digital network that moves up to 128,000
bits-per-second over a regular phone line at nearly the same cost as a normal
phone call.
ISP - Internet Service
Provider is your connection to the Internet. You use an ISP to connect onto the
Internet every time you log on. See also IAP. Issuing Bank - The bank that
maintains the consumer's credit card account and must pay out to the merchant's
account in a credit card purchase. The issuing bank then bills the customer for
the debt.
J
Javascript - JavaScript
is an interpreted programming or script language from Netscape. In general,
script languages are easier and faster to code in than the more structured and
compiler languages such as C and C++. Script languages generally take longer to
process than compiled languages, but are very useful for shorter programs.
JavaScript is used in Web site development to do such things as: Automatically
change a formatted date on a Web page (see our "Today" page), cause a linked-to
page to appear in a popup window (see our "Make a WordPop!" page), cause text or
a graphic image to change during a mouse rollover.
Jpeg - (also jpg) - a
graphic image created by choosing from a range of compression qualities
(actually, from one of a suite of compression algorithm ). When you create a
JPEG or convert an image from another format to a JPEG, you are asked to specify
the quality of image you want. Since the highest quality results in the largest
file, you can make a trade-off between image quality and file size. Formally,
the JPEG file format is ISO standard 10918. The JPEG scheme includes 29 distinct
coding processes although a JPEG implementor may not use them all. JPEG is an
acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the committee that established the
baseline algorithms.
L
Link - A link will
transport you from one Internet site to another with just a click of your mouse.
Links can be text or graphic and are recognizable once you know what to look
for. Text links usually will be underlined and often a different color than the
rest of the text on your screen. A graphic link usually has a frame around it.
Listserv - The most
widespread of mail lists. Listervs started on BITNET and are now common on the
Internet.
Local - In networks,
local refers to files, devices, and other resources at your workstation.
Resources located at other nodes on the networks are remote.
Log File - A file created
by a web or proxy server that contains all of the access information regarding
the activity on that server.
M
Mailbox quotas - The
amount of space we allot for each user to be able to use. This amount is
currently set at 15MB.
Mail Exchange Record -
(MX Record) A DNS resource record type indicating which host can handle
electronic mail for a particular domain.
Mail order / telephone order
discount rate - The discount rate charged by the merchant account provider
for credit card transaction in which the actual credit card was not available to
the merchant. MOTO discount rates are generally higher than swipe discount rates
to account for the increased chance of fraud or nonpayment.
Mailing List - Electronic
discussion groups that link a relatively small group of people together by
common interests and that are distributed throughout the Internet via its global
email system. If you belong to a mailing list, you receive every message that is
posted to that list.
Mail server username -
username@yourdomain.com
MCSE - Microsoft
Certified Systems Engineer.
Merchant Account Provider
- A bank or other institution that hosts merchant accounts and processes online
credit card transactions. The term is also often used broadly to include any
credit card processing service, including ISOs.
Merchant Account - An
account established by a merchant to receive the proceeds of credit card
purchases. By establishing a merchant account, the merchant bank agrees to pay
the merchant for valid credit card purchases in exchange for the right to
collect on the debt owed by the consumer.
Merchant Bank - A bank
that holds a merchant account. After a consumer buys a product using a credit
card, the merchant bank places funds into a merchant account in exchange for the
right to collect on the debt owed by a consumer. See also merchant account
provider.
Merchant Services
Provider - A bank, ISO, or other firm that provides services for processing
financial transactions, usually credit card sales. Many MSPs provide merchant
accounts, while others require their clients to establish merchant accounts on
their own. Some MSPs claim that they do not require merchant accounts; this may
indicate factoring, which is illegal in many areas. See also
holdback.
Monthly Minimum - The
minimum amount in fees and percentages charged by a merchant services provider
in a given month. If account activity does not generate the monthly minimum, the
account holder must make up the difference.
MX/A DNS records -
Changed when creating a POP account on DN, the 'A' record identifies the users
mail server for their domain (i.e. mail.mydomain.com). The 'MX' (mail exchange)
record identifies where to send the email, in this case
'pop.directnic.com.'
N
Nameserver - A name
server is a computer that contains a list of domain names and the associated IP
addresses. When a domain name is typed in a web browser, the nameserver
associates that with the IP address and the correct web site opens in the web
browser.
Navigation Bar (Navbar) -
A Navbar is just a kind of "Table of Contents" of a site that stays available so
the reader can move easily from place to place.
Netiquette - Contraction
of Internet etiquette, the etiquette guidelines for posting messages to online
services, and particularly Internet newsgroups. Netiquette covers not only rules
to maintain civility in discussions (i.e., avoiding flames), but also special
guidelines unique to the electronic nature of forum messages. For example,
netiquette advises users to use simple formats because complex formatting may
not appear correctly for all readers. In most cases, netiquette is enforced by
fellow users who will vociferously object if you break a rule of netiquette.
See: http://www.albion.com/netiquette
Newsgroup - A discussion
group on Usenet devoted to talking about a specific topic. Currently, there are
over 45,000 newsgroups. Also called USENET, they are groups that often have
nothing to do with news. Newsgroups are ongoing discussion groups among people
on the Internet who share a mutual interest.
NS record - nameserver
record.
Nslookup - Nslookup is a
program to query Internet domain name servers. Nslookup has two modes:
interactive and non-interactive. Interactive mode allows
O
Operation systems (or OS)
- The main control program of a computer that schedules tasks, manages storage,
and handles communication with peripherals. Its main part, called the kernel, is
always present. The operating system presents a basic user interface when no
applications are open, and all applications must communicate with the operating
system.
OS- see Operating
System.
OSI - (Open Systems
Interconnection, or Open Systems Interconnect). A model developed by ISO
(International Organization for Standardization) to allow computer systems made
by different vendors to communicate with each other. The goal of OSI is to
create a worldwide open systems networking environment where all systems can
interconnect. Most communications protocols today are based on the OSI model.
OSI defines a framework for communications which has seven layers: 1) the
physical layer, 2) the data link layer, 3) the network layer, 4) the transport
layer, 5) the session layer, 6) the presentation layer, and 7) the application
layer. Control is passed from one layer to the next. A communication begins with
the application layer on one end (for example, a user opening an application and
typing a request). The communication is passed through each of the seven layers
down to the physical layer (which is the actual transmission of bits). On the
receiving end, control passes back up the hierarchy.
P
Page - All websites are a
collection of electronic "pages." Each Web page is a document formatted in HTML
(Hypertext Markup Language) that contains text, images or media objects, such as
RealAudio player files, QuickTime videos or Java applets. The "home page" is
typically a visitor's first point of entry and features a site index. Pages can
be static or dynamically generated. All frames and frame parent documents are
counted as pages.
Page Views - Number of
times a user requests a page that may contain a particular ad. Indicative of the
number of times an ad was potentially seen, or "gross impressions." Page views
may overstate ad impressions if users choose to turn off graphics (often done to
speed browsing).
Party - A Complainant or
a Respondent.
Perl - Perl is a
general-purpose programming language invented in 1987 by Larry Wall. It has
become the language of choice for World Wide Web development, text processing,
Internet services, mail filtering, graphical programming, systems
administration, and every other task requiring portable and easily developed
solutions.
Personal Identification
Number (PIN): An alphanumeric or numeric code used to verify the identity of
an individual attempting to use a credit card, debit card, or other
account
PHP - PHP is a tool that
let you create dynamic web pages. PHP-enabled web pages are treated just like
regular HTML pages and you can create and edit them the same way you normally
create regular HTML pages.
Ping - Packet Internet
Groper. A program used to test whether a particular network destination is
online, by sending an Internet control message protocol (ICMP) echo request and
waiting for a response. (Also called packet Internet gopher).
Platform - The operating
system (i.e. Windows 95, Windows NT, etc.) used by a visitor to your website.
Png - Portable Network
Graphics bitmap (filename extension).
POP3 - Post Office
Protocol, version 3. The central repository where electronic mail is stored
before the recipient downloads it; analogous to a U.S. Mail post office box
where mail is stored waiting to be picked up. When you use your email program to
check for new messages, this is similar to visiting the post office and using a
key to check a P.O. box.
Portal - Usually used as
a marketing term to described a website that is or is intended to be the first
place people see when using the Web. Typically a "Portal site" has a catalog of
websites, a search engine, or both. A Portal site may also offer email and other
service to entice people to use that site as their main "point of entry" (hence
"portal") to the Web.
Posting - Sending an
article to a newsgroup, listserv, etc. Online, you send email messages to people
and posts to lists.
Preregistration - The
theoretical process of paying for registration of new TLD before it becomes
available, not necessarily guaranteeing that domain's registration.
Primary email - The
primary email address for an account. The price for a primary email is currently
set at $10 per year.
Propagation - When a
domain name is registered and has name servers set for it, the information that
tells other computers about that domain name is distributed throughout the
internet so that all computers on the internet can find the new domain. This
process is called propagation and can take several days once a domain name is
registered.
Protocol - An established
method of exchanging data over the Internet.
Python - An interpreted,
object-oriented programming language developed by Guido van Rossum. The name
comes from one of van Rossum's favorite television shows, Monty Python's Flying
Circus. Python is very portable since Python interpreters are available for most
operating system platforms. Although Python is copyrighted, the source code is
freely available, and unlike GNU software, it can be commercially
re-sold.
Q
Qmail - The email
POP3/SMTP system used by Intercosmos.
R
Real Time Processing -
The verification and processing of credit card transactions immediately
following a purchase. Real-time verification on the Web usually takes less than
five minutes. Real-time verification is especially important for websites that
sell products and services that consumers expect immediately, such as
memberships to the site or software downloads.
Redirection - any traffic
going to a domain name will be redirected to a different URL chosen by the user,
for example, a pre-existing website on another server.
Referrer - URL of an HTML
page that refers to your website.
Registrant - The
person that is trying to register a domain for use through a
registrar.
Registrar - A company or
organization that registers domain names for individuals and
organizations.
Registration - To enroll
for the use of, the act of registering.
Registration Agreement -
Means the agreement between a Registrar and a domain-name holder.
Remote - In networks,
remote refers to files, devices, and other resources that are not connected
directly to your workstation. Resources at your workstation are considered
local.
Remote Access - The
ability to log onto a network from a distant location. Generally, this implies a
computer, a modem, and some remote access software to connect to the network.
Whereas remote control refers to taking control of another computer, remote
access means that the remote computer actually becomes a full-fledged host on
the network. The remote access software dials in directly to the network server.
The only difference between a remote host and workstations connected directly to
the network is slower data transfer speeds.
Reserving domains - see
pre-registration.
Return Code - The return
status of the request that specifies whether the transfer was successful and
why. Possible "Success" codes are: 200 = Success - OK 201 = Success - Created
202 = Success - Accepted 203 = Success - Partial Information 204 = Success - No
Response 300 = Success - Redirected 301 = Success - Moved 302 = Success - Found
303 = Success - New Method 304 = Success - Not Modified
Possible "Failed" codes are -
400 = Failed - Bad Request 401 = Failed - Unauthorized 402 = Failed - Payment
Required 403 = Failed - Forbidden 404 = Failed - Not Found 500 = Failed -
Internal Error 501 = Failed - Not Implemented 502 = Failed - Overloaded
Temporarily 503 = Failed - Gateway Timeout
Roll over - To carry over
a previous contract to the new registrar. To keep any time that was previously
registered with a new company.
Router - A device that
finds the best path for a data packet to be sent from one network to another. A
router stores and forwards electronic messages between networks, first
determining all possible paths to the destination address and then picking the
most expedient route, based on the traffic load and the number of hops. A router
works at the network layer (layer 3 of the OSI model); a bridge works at the
data link layer (layer 2). A router does more processing than a bridge does. A
router can be hardware or a combination of hardware and software. An example of
what a router address looks like: gbr4-p80.attga.ip.att.net or
gbr6-p52.attga.ip.att.net.
S
Sales Draft - A receipt
that is sent to the customer.
Search Engine - A Search
Engine is a site that serves as an index to other sites on the Web. Some of the
more popular search engines are "Starting Point," "Yahoo" and "Lycos." Search
engines are relatively easy to use. Normally, they contain references to common
subject areas that you can point-and-click to connect to other links that
connect to other links, and so on. They also give you the opportunity to type in
key words (by themselves, or in combination) to begin a search.
Secure Electronic
Transaction (SET) - A system for encrypting e-commerce transactions, such as
online credit card purchases. Developed by Visa, MasterCard, Microsoft, and
several major banks, SET combines 1,024-bit encryption with digital certificates
to ensure security. SET is still in development. Secure Server - A Web server or
other computer connected to the Internet that is capable of establishing
encrypted communication with clients, generally using SSL or SET.
Secure Socket Layer
(SSL)- A system for encrypting data sent over the Internet, including
e-commerce transactions and passwords. With SSL, client and server computers
exchange public keys, allowing them to encode and decode their
communication.
Security - Ensuring that
private information remains private in an atmosphere where all other information
is free. Security also means that viruses are prevented from infecting people's
systems.
Server - A Server is a
machine that makes services available on a network to client program. A file
server makes files available. A WAIS server makes full-text information
available through the WAIS protocol (although WAIS uses the term source
interchangeably with server).
Server Error - An error
occurring at the server. Web server errors have codes in the 500 ranges.
Server ID - See Web
Server Certificate.
Settlement - The process
of sending the merchants batch to the network for processing and payment.
Shopping Cart - A
software package that runs as part of a website to collect and record purchasing
decisions by a visitor. Shopping cart programs are stored on Web
servers.
Shtml - HTML file with
embedded server-side includes (SSIs) (filename extension).
SIT - Stuffit compressed
file.
SMTP - Simple Mail
Transfer Protocol, used between servers to relay mail.
SOA record - start of
authority record.
Spam (or Spamming) - The
practice of sending copies of a message to many different newsgroups, with no
regard to whether the subject matter is appropriate; or sending the same message
by email to large numbers of people indiscriminately. Sometimes spams are
advertisements. Spamming is considered poor netiquette and can have legal
repercussions because it not only wastes everyone's time, but also costs money.
The sender of the messages does not pay the cost; the sites of the recipient and
others on the route pay it. Spamming often results in angry email replies from
the tar
Spiders - Spiders and
Robots (or "bots") are simply automated programs that explore the Web, looking
for information. The most common kinds of Spiders are the ones that collect Web
addresses for the Search Engines to catalogue. SQL (Structured Query Language) -
A specialized programming language for sending queries to databases. Most
industrial-strength and many smaller database applications can be addressed
using SQL. Each specific application will have its own version of SQL
implementing features unique to that application, but all SQL-capable databases
support a common subset of SQL.
SSL (Secure Sockets
Layer) - A protocol from Netscape Communications Corporation, which is designed
to provide secure communications on the Internet. It has become the universal
standard on the Web for authenticating websites to Web browser users, and for
encrypting communications between browser users and webservers. SSL is built
into all major browsers and Web servers, which means it doesn't matter where the
protocol is implemented, the same implementation is operated. After a digital
certificate, or Server ID, is installed, SSL capabilities are then enabled.
Features of a secure site: 1) The URL changes from http:// to https:// . 2) A
lock symbol appears in the lower left-hand status bar in Netscape Navigator. 3)
A lock symbol appears in the lower right-hand status bar in Internet
Explorer.
Static IP address - A
static or dedicated IP Address is a type of account from an ISP where your
computer(s) are assigned the same IP Address at all times. While this used to be
a requirement for web-site serving, it is usually used today for security
purposes.
Sticky - "Sticky" sites
are those where the visitors stay for an extended period of time. For instance,
a banking site that offers a financial calculator is stickier than one that
doesn't because visitors do not have to leave to find a resource they
need.
Suffix (Domain Name) -
The three-digit suffix of a domain can be used to identify the type of
organization. Possible "Suffixes" are: .com, Commercial; .edu, Educational;
.int, International; .gov, Government; .mil, Military; .net, Network and .org,
Organization.
Surfer - User or Visitor
to a website.
T
T-1 - A high-speed (1.54
megabits/second) network connection.
T-3 - A high speed (45
megabits/second) Internet connection. tar.gz - Combined filename extension for a
file that has been archived using tar and then gzipped.
TCL - Tool Command
Language (TCL). Developed by John Ousterhout, TCL is an interpreted programming
language that is used for developing CGI scripts and prototyping
applications.
TCP - Transmission
Control Protocol works with IP to ensure that packets travel safely on the
Internet.
Tgz - Another name for
.tar.z and .tar.gz.
TLDs - A top level domain
(TLD) is the very last part of an FQDN and helps to group domains by purpose
and/or region. It can be either a generic TLD like '.edu' or a country code TLD
like '.uk'.
TOS - Terms Of Service. A
stated list of the terms that must be agreed on by a user of a particular
service; the terms under which a service provider provides a particular
service.
Traceroute - The Internet
is a large and complex aggregation of network hardware, connected together by
gate ways. Tracking the route one's packets follow (or finding the miscreant
gateway that's discarding your packets) can be difficult. Traceroute utilizes
the IP protocol `time to live' field and attempts to elicit an ICMP
TIME_EXCEEDED response from each gateway along the path to some host.
Transaction Fee - A
charge for each credit card transaction, collected by the merchant account
provider or ISO. Transaction fees usually fall between $0.20 and $1
(U.S.).
Transfer - To have a
domain moved from one registrar to another registrar so that the new registrar
houses the domain name.
TTL - Time to Live. Part
of a Dig result that lists the amount of time left before the nameserver expires
a cached record.
U
Unique Users - The number
of different individuals who visit a site within a specific time period. To
identify unique users, websites rely on some form of user registration or
identification system.
UNIX - A computer
operating system (the basic software running on a computer, underneath things
such as databases and word processors). UNIX can be used by many people at once
("multi-user") and has TCP/IP built-in. UNIX is the most prevalent operating
system for Internet servers.
Uniform Domain Name Dispute
Resolution Policy - 1. This policy is now in effect. See http://www.icann.org/udrp/udrp-schedule.htm
for the implementation schedule. 2. This policy has been adopted by all
accredited domain-name registrars for domain names ending in .com, .net, and
.org. It has also been adopted by certain managers of country-code top-level
domains (e.g., .nu, .tv, .ws). 3. The policy is between the registrar (or other
registration authority in the case of a country-code top-level domain) and its
customer (the domain-name holder or registrant). Thus, the
policy uses "we" and "our" to refer to the registrar and it uses "you" and
"your" to refer to the domain-name holder.
URL - Universal Resource
Locator is a means of identifying an exact location on the Internet. For
example, http://www.directNIC.com/search/ is
the URL which defines the use of HTTP to access the Web page default.htm in the
/html/info/ directory on the WebTrends Corporation website. As the previous
example shows, a URL is comprised of four parts: Protocol Type (HTTP), Machine
Name (webtrends.com), Directory Path (/html/info/), and File Name
(default.htm).
User Agent - The fields
in an extended Web server log file indicating the browser and the platform used
by a visitor.
User mail server -
mail.yourdomain.com
User Session - A session
of activity (all hits) for one user of a website. A unique user is determined by
the IP address or cookie. By default, a user session is terminated when a user
is inactive for more than 30 minutes.
V
Valid Hits - A further
refinement of hits, valid hits are hits that deliver all information to a user.
Excludes hits such as redirects, error messages and computer-generated hits.
View Page - Each request
for a particular web page that displays an ad. Also referred to as an
impression.
Virtual Domain - A
virtual domain is an extension off of your domain name. Once you have purchased
"yourname.com" you can create branches off of this name, such as
"anything.yourname.com". These are called virtual domains.
Visits - A sequence of
requests made by one user at one site. If a visitor does not request any new
information for a period of time, known as the "time-out" period, then the next
request by the visitor is considered a new visit. To enable comparisons among
sites, I/PRO uses a 30-minute time-out.
W
Web browser - a program
such as Netscape, Internet Explorer, and others that are used to view pages on
the World Wide Web.
Web server - a server on
the Internet that holds World Wide Web documents and makes them available for
viewing by remote browsers. Examples: Apache, Microsoft IIS, IBM iPlanet, Cern
HTTPD.
Web Server Certificate -
or Server ID, is a digital document containing unique codes that identify the
holder of the certificate to the person accessing the site. A Web Server
Certificate is issued by a trusted third party called a Certificate of Authority
(CA). CAs must audit the identity of the people or organizations to whom they
issue certificates. Once the CA establishes an organization's identity, it
issues a certificate that contains the organization's public key and signs it
with the CA's private key. SSL certificates hold information about Web-servers.
They contain information about the owners of the certificates, the server to
which the certificate was sold, when it was sold and when it expires. Visitors
to your site will be able to submit credit card numbers and other personal
information to your site, with assurance that they are really doing business
with you, not an impostor, and that the information that they are sending to you
can not be intercepted or decrypted by anyone other than the intended
recipient.
Webmaster - A Webmaster
is someone who keeps a website running and available to its readers. A website
designer is someone who can design effective websites. The two may be the same
person, but usually aren't. They certainly need to be aware of the other's role.
Both need to be able to meet your needs as the client for the spot. A Webmaster
is the person in charge of administrating a World Wide website.
Whois - An Internet
directory service that can be used to find information about domain names users
registered on a server, or other information about the network.
WWW - The common
abbreviation for "World Wide Web." The WWW is what most people refer to as "the
Internet," but it is really one a part of the Internet. The World Wide Web is
commonly also called "The Web."
Z
ZIP - To compress a file
using PKZIP, ZipIt, gzip, or other compatible archiver.