APOP
Secure e-mail protocol. See
POP.
ASP / .ASP (Active Server
Pages)
ASP has come to have numerous meanings in the
technology/computing/internet world. ASP is a term for application service
provider, and is a new term meaning to provide a hosted application. An
application might be to run a virus application from a website which in turn
scours your local hard drive. The application is never installed on your
machine. Another might be to provide accounting or billing or warehouse software
from a remote location. Neotrope offers an e-commerce solution through its
BlueSpin.com website that works in this way — you rent space as part of a larger
application which we host.
".asp" can also refer to active server pages, an
outgrowth of server side includes and tag-based HTML extensions created by
Microsoft and used almost exclusively on Windows NT machines. A scripting
language which allows you to design Web pages that can make displaying,
manipulating and editing databases simpler.
Backbone
A high-speed line or series of
connections that forms a major pathway within a network. On the Internet there
are several major backbone providers like BBN Internet , MCI/SprintLink, and US
West.
Bandwidth
Amount of
data you can send through a connection. Usually measured in bits-per-second
(bps). A 56K modem transfers data up to 53Kbps, or 53,000 bits-per-second. Terms
is also sometimes used in place of "data transfer."
CGI (Common Gateway Interface)
A set of rules
that describe how a Web Server communicates with another piece of software on
the same machine
CGI-Bin
Access
Ability for the customer to write custom programs to
manipulate data on their Web site.
Client
Any software application (and sometimes
used to describe the computer itself) connected to the server and run to
send/retrieve data to a server is called a client, such as a web browser. This
relationship between the "client" and the "server" is often referred to as a
"client server relationship."
Co-location
Refers to having a server that
belongs to one group physically located on an Internet-connected network that
belongs to another group. Usually done because the server owner wants their
machine to be on a high-speed Internet connection and/or they do not want the
security risks of having the server on thier own network.
Custom Error Messages
Refers to the ability to
create custom pages on a hosting account to replace default 404 and other error
pages.
Datacenter
See
NOC.
Data Transfer
This is
the amount of data that you are allowed to transfer with your account. Data is
this case usually referrs to images and text. Typically refers to a data
transfer allotment, most often in GB (gigabytes). Thus, a hosting plan might
come with, "3GB of data transfer." 500 MB of data transfer is equivilant to
about 25,000 page views.
Dial-up
Account
To access and update a Web site, hosting customers need
dial-up access to the Internet (see ISP). Techically, xDSL would still be
considered a dial-up account since you don't have a dedicated wire for data
transfer.
Disk Space (Storage
Space)
Amount of hard disk space available for storage of all Web
pages, HTML, CGI-bin programs, e-mail, log files, images, sound clips, audio,
video clips, etc. 1MB equals one megabyte, or approximately milllion bytes. A
100K file would be 100,000 bytes.
Domain
Name
The unique name that identifies an Internet site. Domain
Names always have 2 or more parts, separated by dots. The part on the left is
the most specific, and the part on the right is the most
general.
Domain Name
Registration
Refers to registering a name which can be used for
hosting a domain name, such as www.anyname.com.
DS-3
Connection to Internet Backbone favored by
most medium-size Web hosting providers. More than 28 times the bandwidth of a
T-1 connection.
Electronic Commerce
(E-Commerce)
Allows Website customers to sell products and
services online and accept payment at the same time, usually through a
cgi-script of some kind.
E-Mail
Aliases/Forwarders
E-mail forwarders and aliases are e-mail
addresses such as billing@yourdomain.com which do not have a username/password
as a "POP" account would. Instead, you would set up billing@yourdomain.com to
forward to a real POP account such as customerservice@yourdomain.com. The only
real distinction between an alias and a forward, is than an alias will likely
forward to another existing account at the same domain, whereas a forward might
be sent to another e-mail account with an ISP: such as cs@yourdomain.com being
forwarded to cs@gte.net or similar.
E-Mail
Autoresponders/Vacation Messages
Allow customers to set up an
automatic message to respond to anyone who sends email to the
customer.
File Extensions
In
the DOS/Windows computer world, and UNIX as well, almost every file (anything on
your computer that isn't a folder is a file in this context) must have some kind
of extension. Example: index.htm would be a filename, where ".htm" is the file
extension. On a PC in particular the operating system needs an extesion in order
to determine what kind of file it is, and what to do with it when it is
activated. With the internet, you may see extensions like .exe, .cgi, .asp,
.htm, .jsp, .cfm, .tam, .php, .shtml, .pl, and many others. It is important to
note that in some cases you have to be aware of the proper extension to use for
a file depending on the environment in which the file will be
used.
File Transfer Protocol
(FTP)
Short for "file transfer protocol," FTP is a method for
transferring data to/from web servers via a slightly different method than used
by web browsers (which use the http method). FTP software is used to upload
files to your virtual, shared, or dedicated web server site. FTP can also be
used for direct downloads of files and images from a web server without being
served from the public html directory (anonymous FTP). FTP access to a web
server requires a password and username in order to gain access to the
file/folder directories of a virtual domain.
FrontPage2000
Microsoft's FrontPage 2000 software
is a Web site development software package. It uses unique Microsoft file types
(often referred to as "Microsoft extensions"). A Web server and virtual domain
must be configured to accept these extensions.
FTP Client
Software needed by the customer to
upload content files to their Web site.
FTP
Site/Anonymous FTP
Anonymous FTP is a dedicated area on a virtual
or dedicated hosting domain for download of files, and even upload of files to
an "incoming" folder. FTP is a special way to login to another Internet site for
the purposes of retrieving and/or sending files.
Home Page
The first page in the public directory
of a domain, usually index.php. Called thome page because it's the first page
that loads from a Website.
Hosting
Provider
An company that provides Web space to companies or
individuals, usually for money.
HTML
Hyper-Text Markup Language. The basic page
instruction language used to create web pages. Far easier for basic pages to use
than some might think because many commands are simple such as "" for bold text.
It can be more complex as you get into newer versions which allow for floating
layers, tables, style sheets, and features which don't work across all web
browsers.
HyperText
Text
which links to other content by being an in-context link. The basis of the
original text-only internet page structure. Any word can be a link to another
page, idea, image or internet site, thus the "hyper" in the term. The actual
link is called a "hyper link."
IP
Address
Internet Protocol address. A number analagous to a street
address on the Web. See IP Number. When the internet was invented many years
ago, there needed to be a way to identify one computer from another. The "IP" or
"internet protocol" address has been used since then. In fact many corporate
networks assign IPs to desktop computers without the employee knowing that
they've been using Internet related technology for years, whether connected to
the internet or not. When a Web server is setup, it has its own IP address to
identify itself on the local network. Each virtual server is given its own
static (non-changing) IP address as if it were its own
machine.
IP Number (Internet Protocol
Number)
Sometimes called a dotted quad. A unique number
consisting of 4 parts separated by dots, e.g. 64.65.58.113
IPP
Internet Presence Provider. Another name for
a hosting provider.
ISP
Internet Service Provider (see Dial-Up
access). An ISP is a service provider who creates the connection from your home
or office to the Internet. It's how you connect. Your ISP does not need to be
your hosting provider, or vice versa. This generally refers to how you access
the internet with your computer. Specifically, it is the company you signed up
with and where you "dial in" to connect to the web. If you have an account with
Earthlink, then your ISP will be Earthlink.
Majordomo
An open-source server-based mailing
list system, sometimes called a "reflector" or "list server" (ListServ is
actually a similar product) because any message sent by a member to the list is
re-sent ("reflected") to all the other list subscribers.
Megabyte (MB)
A million bytes. (Technically,
actually 1024 kilobytes).
NOC (Network
Operation Center)
Sometimes called a Datacenter. This is the term
for a secure, managed network environment which may house tens or thousands of
Web servers with power backup and high-speed connections to the Internet
Backbone. NOCs usually have a mixture of OC-3 and DS-3 connections, or higher
(i.e., OC12).
NT/WINDOWS NT
The name used by Microsoft for its business class operating system,
called Windows NT (for "new technology"). Windows NT includes a rudimentary web
server system, and other tools used to create local networks. Windows NT is
useful for creating low-cost websites because NT will run on inexpensive
hardware and has familiar tools to Windows 95/98 users. However, in practice, it
has been found to be about as buggy as Windows itself, and is shunned by many
web hosting purists because of its unreliablity relative to the more expensive
UNIX hardware/software platform. Neotrope no longer offers WindowsNT hosting
services, although we can recommend dedicated hosting providers who
do.
OC-3
Ultra-fast
connectivity for their mission-critical Internet needs, ranging from 60- 155
Mbps of service. Up to 3 times more bandwidth capability than a
T-3.
POP (E-MAIL)
A protocol
used to retrieve e-mail from a mail server. Most e-mail applications (sometimes
called an e-mail client) use the POP protocol, although some can use the newer
IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) or APOP. POP stands for "post office
protocol" not your dear old dad. A "pop" account is any real e-mail account
which uses a password and username to retrieve mail from a virtual server. The
username would be yourname@yourdomain.com and the password would usually be a
mixture of letters and numbers.
Primary
DNS
The Primary Domain Name Server for the customer's domain.
These are the DNS IP numbers, usually preceeded by "ns.name.com" and
"ns2.name.com" and a domain must point at a DNS for it to "resolve" to a local
virtual location.
Secure Server
(SSL)
Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol. Requires use of a
certificate for secure access. A Secure Socket Layer does not provide for credit
card clearing or any other form of payment processing. It only provides a
facility for secure transactions across the Internet. Some hosting providers
allow use of a "shared" certificate.
Server
In a modern computing environment there are usually two kinds of
computer classifications when more than one is connected together to create a
network. The server is the computer which provides data and is the central
repository, and/or gatekeeper between multiple "client" computers. A server can
also be called a "host" because it hosts the data "served" to
"clients."
Server Side
Includes
Server side includes (or SSI) is a set of tags which can
be used within HTML pages to be replaced by something else, added ("included")
by the server. An example might be that you have one file with copyright
information which goes on the bottom of every page. By using a SSI tag, you
could tell the server to replace every tag on every page with the copyright
information. The benefit is that you could have one file containing the
copyright information that gets placed on hundreds of pages on your site. By
updating the single page, all the others are instantly updated when loaded by
the server. On most servers you must use a filename extension of ".shtml" in
order for SSI tags to operate.
Shell
Account
A UNIX shell account to their shared server Web site,
allows a customers to update their Web site content using
Telnet.
T-1
A leased-line
connection capable of carrying data at 1,544,000 bits-per-second. At maximum
theoretical capacity, a T-1 line could move a megabyte in less than 10 seconds.
That is still not fast enough for full-screen, full-motion video, for which you
need at least 10,000,000 bits-per-second.
T-3
A leased-line connection capable of carrying
data at 44,736,000 bits-per-second. This is more than enough to do full-screen,
full-motion video.
Telnet
The command and program used to login from one Internet site to another.
The telnet command/program gets you to the login: prompt of another
host.
Transfer
Total amount
of data transferred from the customer's Web site to clients. Includes all HTML,
Web pages, images, sounds, videos, etc. See Data Transfer.
UNIX
An operating system used on business-class
computers typically used as "servers" which serve databases, websites, or other
corporate applications. UNIX has numerous variants including IRIX (SGI), Solaris
(Sun), and derivitives including Linux, Apple OSX, and
others.
URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
The standard way to give the address of any resource on the
Internet that is part of the World Wide Web (WWW). A URL looks like this: http://www.philippineswebhosting.net
Virtual Hosting
Virtual hosting describes a
remote web server which is "host" to numerous domain names, where each domain
name owner has all of the features of having a dedicated (on site) server.
Virtual hosting provides for most of the same features of a dedicated server but
is located in a high speed dedicated data center costing millions of dollars.
The cost to maintain a virtual server for each site owner is a fraction of the
cost of a dedicated server, with most of the benefits.
Web Server
A computer, or a software package,
that provides a specific kind of service to client software running on other
computers. The term can refer to a particular piece of software (such as Apache
or WebStar) or to the machine on which the software is
running.
Web Site
A Web site
is a collection of Web pages that reside together on the World Wide Web and are
connected. Web site also refers to the server space allocated to a specific
customer in a shared "virtual" server environment. NeotropeHosting.com would be
a "Web site," while the page you are reading now would be a "Web
page."
Web Site Traffic
Reporting
Reporting software to provide information such as the
frequency of hits, page views, amount of data transfer, and total transfer
sizes. Popular reporting tools include Analog, Webalizer, and
WebTrends
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