Archive for February, 2009

Strange New Ways To Combat Your Internet Addiction!

February 26th, 2009
I am addicted to the Internet. I am a busy working parent and still I find the time to check my e-mail, chat with my friends in Yahoo Instant Messenger, read news, forums and on and on.

I need “to know” and I need “to have” more than ever before. I want to get my latest news. I want to spread the news to my on-line and off-line friends, who, I might add, are doing exactly the same. I need to get a new book or … shoes or … gadget just because it is there and easy to buy, no need to drive and look for parking at the mall. Don’t you love these FREE shipping offers? All this is in addition to already being entertained on the Internet watching YouTube, listening to iTunes etc. Do you do the same?

It is not hard to find out if you’re addicted to the Internet. Do you find that when you get online you’re frequently surprised by the amount of time that has passed? Do you find yourself staying home instead of enjoying a beautiful day outside because you’d rather use the Internet?

A recent study from Stanford University School of Medicine found that more than one in eight Americans show signs that they could be suffering from some form of internet addiction.

How do you cure this problem? Google “Internet Addiction” and log on to a bunch of websites? Instant Message other sufferers? Join an Internet support group? Or buy self-help books from our favorite on-line store (after performing an extensive price comparison)? You might as well offer a drink to an alcoholic trying to cure his addiction.

In China, parents send their children as young as 12 to the first officially licensed clinic for Internet addiction at the Beijing Military Region Central Hospital. That is after their kids skip school to spend time playing online games and visiting chat rooms. These kids are admitted suffering from depression, nervousness, panic, fear, agitation, unwillingness to interact with others, sleep disorders, the shakes and numbness in their hands. The daily schedule at the center begins at 6 a.m. and includes electric shock treatment and the administration of intravenous drips to “adjust the unbalanced status of brain secretions”.

This sounds a little extreme to me. How about a gentler American way of approaching this problem? How about using a new high-tech device called SnoopStick?

SnoopStick is a very small USB flash drive device that will allow someone to fully monitor and limit your access to the Internet from any other computer on the Internet. Just run the set-up program on your computer then unplug the device and give it to your trusted friend. Your friend will plug Snoop Stick to any Windows-based computer (in her home or office) and at any time will be able to monitor your Internet use and disable your access to the Internet if needed. You can also specify the times when you will be able to access Internet and SnoopStick will enforce this schedule.

Stay aware, alert, and in control of your Internet with Snoop Stick.


Watch the video demonstration and get more information on SnoopStick from http://www.MyKidsInternetSafety.com

Satellite Internet Vs. Dial-Up Internet

February 24th, 2009
If you are tired of having to dial up to the Internet in order to check your e-mail or surf the web then satellite Internet could be the right choice to help you get connected to the rest of the world faster and more reliably.

The primary problem that is presented with dial-up is that you are not always connected to the Internet. Instead, you must obtain a connection to the Internet through your phone line. This can result in multiple problems, including the fact that while you are surfing the Internet, your phone line is busy; making it impossible for you to place outgoing calls or receive ingoing calls unless you want to splurge on the cost of another phone line just to have dedicated Internet service.

The difference between dial-up Internet connections and satellite Internet connections is that you do not have to dial-up to anything to connect to the Internet. In fact, you do not have to establish a connection at all with satellite Internet. Once your satellite Internet service is set up with your provider, you are always connected. Provided that your computer is turned on, you will always be connected tot the Internet. You do not have to log in or enter a password in most instances. Your phone line is not tied up because your connection is not placed through your phone line. Instead, your Internet connection is established using a satellite dish and a receiver that receives signals from fixed satellites orbiting high above the Earth.

The cost of satellite Internet is also much more affordable than dial-up Internet in the long-run when all factors are taken into consideration. In some cases you might be able to find a dial-up connection that is cheaper, but you must also taken into consideration the amount of time that will spent trying to log on to the Internet, getting kicked off and trying to download what you need.

The cost of satellite Internet service is fixed and does not rely on varying amounts of usage per month. Most satellite Internet providers also provide a tiered level of service packages so that you can choose the option that best suits your needs.

For example, if you only need to surf from home and email frequently, then you will typically be able to choose a less expensive home package option. If you do a lot of heavy surfing on the web, share photos and download music frequently, then an advanced package may be the best option. There are also usually options that are ideal for homes and/or businesses that have computers surfing the Internet simultaneous and who send and receive large files. Regardless of which option you ultimately choose you will have the peace of mind in knowing that you can get connected to the Internet anytime you like without having to lose valuable time waiting for a connection. Furthermore, you can take advantage of high speed Internet service regardless of where you live.

If you are tired of dial-up internet service, HughesNet can help. Offering speeds up to 50x faster than dial-up, HughesNet is the solution to slow download times. Service is available throughout the lower 48 states. With free standard installation, getting Hughes internet is easy and affordable.

How the Internet actually works

February 21st, 2009
To most people, the Internet is the place to which everyone plugs in their computer and views webpages and sends e-mail. That’s a very human-centric viewpoint, but if we’re to truly understand the Internet, we need to be more exact:

The Internet is THE large global computer network that people connect to by-default, by virtue of the fact that it’s the largest. And, like any computer network, there are conventions that allow it to work.

This is all it is really – a very big computer network. However, this article will go beyond explaining just the Internet, as it will also explain the ‘World Wide Web’. Most people don’t know the difference between the Internet and Web, but really it’s quite simple: the Internet is a computer network, and the Web is a system of publishing (of websites) for it.

Computer networks

And, what’s a computer network? A computer network is just two or more of computers connected together such that they may send messages between each other. On larger networks computers are connected together in complex arrangements, where some intermediary computers have more than one connection to other computers, such that every computer can reach any other computer in the network via paths through some of those intermediary computers.

Computers aren’t the only things that use networks – the rail network is very similar to computer networks, just that transports people instead of information.

Trains operate on a certain kind of track – such a convention is needed, because otherwise the network could not effectively work. Computers in a network have conventions too, and we usually call these conventions ‘protocols’.

There are many kinds of popular computer network today. The most conventional by far is the so-called ‘Ethernet’ network that physically connects computers together in homes, schools and offices. However, WiFi is becoming increasingly popular for connecting together devices so that cables aren’t required at all.

Connecting to the Internet

When you connect to the Internet, you’re using networking technology, but things are usually a lot muddier. There’s an apt phrase, “Rome wasn’t built in a day” because neither was the Internet. The only reason the Internet could spring up so quickly and cheaply for people was because another kind of network already existed throughout the world – the phone network!

The pre-existence of the phone network provided a medium for ordinary computers in ordinary people’s homes to be connected onto the great high-tech military and research network that had been developed in years before. It just required some technological mastery in the form of ‘modems’. Modems allow phone lines to be turned into a mini-network connection between a home and a special company (an ‘ISP’) that already is connected up to the Internet. It’s like a bridge joining up the road networks on an island and the mainland – the road networks become one, due to a special kind of connection between them.

The Internet

The really amazing about the Internet isn’t the technology. We’ve actually had big Internet-like computer networks before, and ‘The Internet’ existed long before normal people knew the term. The amazing thing is that such a massive computer network could exist without being built or governed in any kind of seriously organised way. The only organisation that really has a grip on the core computer network of the Internet is a US-government-backed non-profit company called ‘ICANN’, but nobody could claim they ‘controlled’ the Internet, as their mandate and activities are extremely limited.

What I have described so far is probably not the Internet as you or most would see it. It’s unlikely you see the Internet as a democratic and uniform computer network, and to an extent, it isn’t. The reason for this is that I have only explained the foundations of the system so far, and this foundation operates below the level you’d normally be aware of. On the lowest level you would be aware of, the Internet is actually more like a situation between a getter and a giver – there’s something you want from the Internet, so you connect up and get it. Even when you send an e-mail, you’re getting the service of e-mail delivery.

Being a computer network, the Internet consists of computers – however, not all computers on the Internet are created equal. Some computers are there to provide services, and some are there to consume those services. We call the providing computers ’servers’ and the consuming computers ‘clients’. At the theoretical level, the computers have equal status on the network, but servers are much better connected than clients and are generally put in place by companies providing some kind of commercial service. You don’t pay to view a web site, but somebody pays for the server the website is located on – usually the owner of the web site pays a ‘web host’ (a commercial company who owns the server).

Making contact

I’ve established how the Internet is a computer network: now I will explain how two computers that could be on other sides of the world can send messages to each other.

Imagine you were writing a letter and needed to send it to someone. If you just wrote a name on the front, it would never arrive, unless perhaps you lived in a small village. A name is rarely specific enough. Therefore, as we all know, we use addresses to contact someone, often using: the name, the house number, the road name, the town name, the county name, and sometimes, the country name. This allows sending of messages on another kind of network – the postal network. When you send a letter, typically it will be passed between postal sorting offices starting from the sorting office nearest to the origin, then up to increasingly large sorting offices until it’s handled by a sorting office covering regions for both the origin and the destination, then down to increasingly small sorting offices until it’s at the sorting office nearest the destination – and then it’s delivered.

In our postal situation, there are two key factors at work – a form of addressing that ‘homes in’ on the destination location, and a form of message delivery that ‘broadens out’ then ‘narrows in’. Computers are more organised, but they actually effectively do exactly the same thing.

Each computer on the Internet is given an address (’IP address’), and this ‘homes in’ on their location. The ‘homing in’ isn’t done strictly geographically, rather in terms of the connection-relationship between the smaller computer networks within the Internet. For the real world, being a neighbour is geographical, but on a computer network, being a neighbour is having a direct network connection.

Like the postal network with its sorting offices, computer networks usually have connections to a few other computer networks. A computer network will send the message to a larger network (a network that is more likely to recognise at least some part of the address). This process of ‘broadening out’ continues until the message is being handled by a network that is ‘over’ the destination, and then the ‘narrowing in’ process will occur.

An example ‘IP address’ is ‘69.60.115.116′. They are just series of digit groups where the digit groups towards the right are increasingly local. Each digit group is a number between 0 and 255. This is just an approximation, but you could think of this address meaning: A computer 116 in a small neighbourhood 115 in a larger neighbourhood 60 controlled by an ISP 69 (on the Internet) The neighbourhoods, the ISP, and the Internet, could all be consider computer networks in their own right. Therefore, for a message to the same ‘larger neighbourhood’, the message would be passed up towards one of those intermediary computers in the larger neighbourhood and then back down to the correct smaller neighbourhood, and then to the correct computer.

Getting the message across

Now that we are able to deliver messages the hard part is over. All we need to do is to put stuff in our messages in a certain way such that it makes sense at the other end.

Letters we send in the real world always have stuff in common – they are written on paper and in a language understood by both sender and receiver. I’ve discussed before how conventions are important for networks to operate, and this important concept remains true for our messages.

All parts of the Internet transfer messages written in things called ‘Packets’, and the layout and contents of those ‘packets’ are done according to the ‘Internet Protocol’ (IP). You don’t need to know these terms, but you do need to know that these simple messages are error prone and simplistic.

You can think of ‘packets’ as the Internet equivalence of a sentence – for an ongoing conversation, there would be many of them sent in both directions of communication.

Reliable message transfer on the Internet is done via ‘TCP’. IP is fundamental to the Internet, but TCP is not – there are in fact other ‘protocols’ that may be used that I won’t be covering.

Names, not numbers

When most people think of an ‘Internet Address’ they think of something like ‘www.ocportal.com’ rather than ‘69.60.115.116′. People relate to names with greater ease than numbers, so special computers that humans need to access are typically assigned names (’domain names’) using a system known as ‘DNS’ (the ‘domain name system’).

All Internet communication is still done using IP addresses (recall ‘69.60.115.116′ is an IP address). The ‘domain names’ are therefore translated to IP addresses behind the scenes, before the main communication starts.

At the core, the process of looking up a domain name is quite simple – it’s a process of ‘homing in’ by moving leftwards through the name, following an interrogation path. This is best shown by example – ‘www.ocportal.com’ would be looked up as follows:

Every computer on the Internet knows how to contact the computers (the ‘root’ ‘DNS servers’) responsible for things like ‘com’, ‘org’, ‘net’ and ‘uk’. There are a few such computers and one is contacted at random. The DNS server computer is asked if they know ‘www.ocportal.com’ and will respond saying they know which server computer is responsible for ‘com’. The ‘com’ server computer is asked it knows ‘www.ocportal.com’ and will respond saying they know which server computer is responsible for ‘ocportal.com’. ‘The ‘ocportal.com’ server computer is asked if it knows ‘www.ocportal.com’ and will respond saying that it knows the corresponding server computer to be ‘69.60.115.116′.

Note that there is a difference between a server computer being ‘responsible’ for a domain name and the domain name actually corresponding to that computer. For example, the ‘ocportal.com’ responsible DNS server might not necessarily be the same server as ‘ocportal.com’ itself.

Meaningful dialogue

I’ve fully covered the essence of how messages are delivered over the Internet, but so far these messages are completely raw and meaningless. Before meaningful communication can occur we need to layer on yet another protocol (recall IP and TCP protocols are already layered over our physical network).

There are many protocols that work on the communications already established, including:

HTTP – for web pages, typically read in web browser software POP3 – for reading e-mail SMTP – for sending e-mail

I’m not going to go into the details of any of these protocols because it’s not really relevant unless you actually need to know it.

The information transferred via a protocol is usually a request for something, or a response for something requested. For example, with HTTP, a client computer requests a certain web page from a server via HTTP and then the web server, basically, responds with the file embedded within HTTP.

Each of these protocols operates on more or more so-called ‘ports’, and it is these ‘ports’ that allow the computers to know which protocol to use. For example, a web server (special computer software running on a server computer that serves out web pages) uses a port of number ‘80′, and hence when the server receives messages on that port it passes them to the web server software which naturally knows that they’ll be written in HTTP.

The World Wide Web

I’ve explained how the Internet works, but not yet how the web works. The web is the publishing system that most people don’t realise is distinguishable from the Internet itself.

The Internet uses IP addresses (often found via domain names) to identify resources, but the web has to have something more sophisticated as it would be silly if every single page on the Internet had to have it’s own ‘domain name’. The web uses ‘URLs’ (uniform resource locators), and I’m sure you know about these as nowadays they are printed all over the place in the real world.

A typical URL looks like this: :///

For example: http://www.ocportal.com/index.php

HTTP is the core protocol for the web. This is why URLs usually start ‘http://’.

Typically the ‘resource identifier’ is simply a file on the server computer. For example, ‘mywebsite/index.html’ would be a file on the server computer of the same path, stored underneath a special directory.

We now have three kinds of ‘Internet Address’, in order of increasing sophistication: IP addresses Domain names URLs If a URL were put into web browser software by a prospective reader then the web browser would send out an appropriate request (usually, with the HTTP protocol being appropriate) to the server computer identified by the URL. The server computer would then respond and typically the web browser would end up with a file. The web browser would then interpret the file for display, much like any software running on a computer would interpret the files it understands.

An ‘HTML’ file is the kind of file that defines a web page. It’s written in plain text, and basically mixes information showing show to display a document along with the document itself.

I’ve explained how typical web pages are just files on the disk of a server computer. Increasingly, things are slightly less direct. When you visit something like eBay you aren’t just reading files. You’re actually interacting with computer software, and the web pages you receive are generated anew by that software every time a request is made. These kinds of systems are known as ‘web applications’ and are becoming increasingly prevalent.

Chris Graham is Managing Director of ocProducts (http://ocproducts.com/), a company specialising in advanced website solutions, via the ocPortal website engine (http://ocportal.com/). ocPortal allows the creation of interactive and dynamic websites with great ease; advanced websites that anybody can create, run and manage.

Satellite Internet Service — Is It Right For You?

February 21st, 2009
Satellite Internet Service

There are many rural areas where DSL (direct subscriber line) or cable Internet service is not available. If you live in one of those areas and want fast, reliable, high-speed Internet service, satellite Internet is what you’re looking for.

Though not as fast as DSL or cable Internet service, satellite Internet service is much faster than 56K dialup service, and is available to anyone in the United States who has a clear view of the southern sky.

Satellite Internet Service Features



Satellite Internet service is up to 10 times faster than dialup service, so you can surf the web and download files in a fraction of the time it takes with dialup.



Satellite Internet service is always on, so you don’t have to wait to connect to the Internet.



Satellite Internet service is separate from your phone line, so you can surf the Internet and talk on the phone at the same time, plus you won’t miss any telephone calls.



Satellite Internet Compared to DSL and Cable

To give you an idea of the differences between high-speed services, here’s a comparison of satellite TV service from DirecWay, versus DSL and Cable service from EarthLink. For more information on these services click on the links below.

Speed

Satellite Internet service: Up to 10 times faster than dialup service (700 Kbps download speed and 128 Kbps upload speed. DSL Internet service: Up to 70 times faster than dialup service (up to 3 Mps download speed and 128 upload speed). Cable Internet service: Up to 100 times faster than dialup service (up to 5 Mps download speed and 384 Kbps upload speed.

Monthly Service Fee

Satellite Internet service: From $59.99 per month. DSL Internet service: $19.95 for the first six months, then $39.95 thereafter. Cable Internet service: $29.95 for the first 6 months, then $41.95 thereafter.

Equipment Cost

Satellite Internet service: $499.98. DSL Internet service: Free. Cable Internet service: Free.

Installation

Satellite Internet service: Free. DSL Internet service: Do it yourself or pay an installer. Cable Internet service: Free.

Activation Fee

Satellite Internet service: None. DSL Internet service: None. Cable Internet service: None.

Email Accounts

Satellite Internet service: 5 accounts. DSL Internet service: 8 accounts. Cable Internet service: 8 accounts.

Virus, Spam, and Spyware Protection:

Satellite Internet service: Yes. DSL Internet service: Yes. Cable Internet Service: Yes.

Customer Service

Satellite Internet service: 24/7 toll-free telephone and Internet service. DSL Internet service: 24/7 toll free-telephone and Internet service. Cable Internet Service: 24/7 toll free-telephone and Internet service.

DirecWay Satellite Internet Service

DirecWay is the largest and most reliable satellite Internet service. Most other satellite TV providers are actually DirecWay affiliates, meaning they use DirecWay’s equipment and satellites, but offer different services.

DirecWay offers two satellite Internet plans:

Plan A — You pay $99.99 per month for 15 months, then $59.99 per month thereafter.

Plan B — You pay $499.98 for your equipment and installation, then $59.99 per month for service.

Bottom Line

Because DSL and cable Internet services are faster and cheaper than satellite service, I recommend clicking on the links below to see if they are available in your area.

If not, then satellite is the way to go if you want high-speed Internet service.

Click on the following link for more information on satellite Internet service, or these links for ordering information and the latest offers from DISH Network satellite Internet service or DIRECTV satellite Internet service.

Brian Stevens is the senior editor for www.TheSatelliteTVGuide.com and has written extensively on satellite Internet service.

Internet Wealth System- Earn Money From Home-Review And Bonuses

February 19th, 2009


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