What
is the Internet?
The Internet, or "Net" for short, is simply a series of computer networks linked to one another around the world, communicating almost instantaneously with one another. (A single network of computers might be all the computers linked to one another within an office or a retail store. A larger network might be all the computers connected within an entire chain of retail stores). The Internet is many tens of thousands of these networks communicating with one another, like a big net or web! University networks connected to government networks connected to business networks connected to private networks--this is the INTERNET!
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Any
computer can communicate with any other computer on this network. These
computer networks are physically linked to one another with telephone,
radio, cable lines or via satellite. Networks from other continents are
interconnected by the large, intercontinental telephone and fiber optic
communication lines that run beneath the ocean floor.
Nobody knows for sure how big the Internet
is, or how many networks are actually linked, but it is estimated that
there are approximately forty to fifty million people
that are 'on-line', with sites on every continent, including Antarctica.
In fact, the Internet has grown at an exponential rate since its' beginning.
It is the largest network of computers in the world and is growing at about
ten percent each month. At the current rate of growth, in just ten
months from today, half of the users on the Internet would be using the
Internet for their very first time. |