Exploring the Internet with Netscape Navigator

This chapter describes how to get started using Netscape Navigator. First you learn how to connect to your service provider and start Navigator. Secondly, you get a tour of the Navigator window and learn how to work with pages. Finally, you learn some basic tasks such as sending and receiving email, and participating in newsgroups.

If you want basic information on the Internet and World Wide Web before you continue, read "How does Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition connect me to the Internet?"

Then read this chapter to get an overview of how to explore with Netscape Navigator.


Additional reading

While this chapter provides basic information on exploring the Internet with Netscape Navigator, you can find detailed information in the following sources:


Starting Netscape Navigator

Netscape Navigator will automatically connect you to your service provider as described in the following sections.


For Windows 95 users

Windows 95 users will find Netscape Navigator icons on their desktops and in the Netscape submenu (on the Start|Programs menu). Use the following two-step process to start Navigator and connect to your service provider.

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To change the way this works (for example, start Netscape Navigator without connecting to your service provider), use your dialer software. See Chapter 2 for more information.

For Windows 3.1 users

Windows 3.1 users will find a Netscape Navigator icon in their Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition program group.



To change the way this works (for example, start Netscape Navigator without connecting to your service provider), use your Netscape Dialer software. See Chapter 2 for more information.


About the Netscape Navigator window

When you first start Netscape Navigator, you see a home page--the page you view each time you start Navigator. Often, Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition is preset to display the Netscape home page or your ISP's home page, but you can change this to any page you want. You'll learn how to do this later, on page 22.

Most of the information on the Internet is organized in pages that are linked to one another. Pages are located on different computers throughout the Internet. (Remember, that's all the Internet is--a vast collection of linked computers.)

Near the top of the window, notice the URL (Uniform Resource Locator) in the location field. Each page on the Internet has its own unique URL to identify it. Like an address, the URL tells Navigator the location of a page. Once Navigator knows the URL, it can find the page and display it for you. For more information, see page 24.



You can open multiple Navigator windows to view multiple pages at once. In Navigator, click File|New Web Browser to open a new Navigator window.

Viewing other pages

To bring other Internet pages to your screen, do the following:

Links


Type a URL

In the location field, you can type the URL of a page you want to see. Usually, you won't need to know a page's URL because it's included as part of a link. Behind the scenes, Navigator already knows a page's URL when you click on highlighted text, click a button, or select a menu item. But increasingly, URLs are included on business cards, in magazine and newspaper articles, and in correspondence. Consequently, you might often have the specific URL of a page you want to view. For more information on URLs, see "Addresses on the World Wide Web."

Page information in the Navigator window

When you bring another page to your screen, Navigator loads or transfers the page to your computer. The page itself doesn't actually move to your computer, but Navigator loads the page's information on your screen and maintains a link to it. This way, you can see page information change on your screen when it changes in the actual page. Some pages are constantly changing, such as a page with a "live cam" (a camera that continually transmits its images to a page, and the page then transmits the images on the Internet).

How quickly a page loads depends on the speed of your modem, the length of a page, and how many graphics, sounds, or movies the page contains. You can improve a page's loading time by telling Navigator to load just text and skip the graphics: Click Options|Auto Load Images. If you decide to see images after the page has loaded, click the Images button on the Toolbar.

The Navigator window has several items to help you see page information:



How to see where you've been, and quickly go back

Browsing the Web will take you to many exciting and useful pages. To keep track of these pages and find them again, you can use Navigator's automatic lists or create bookmarks.


History lists

Netscape automatically keeps track of which pages you've recently viewed in the following ways:

Important: When you exit Navigator, your history list is discarded.


Bookmarks

You can also add bookmarks to your favorite pages. Bookmarks are more permanent ways to mark your pages--they stay on the bookmark list until you remove them. The easiest way to create a bookmark is to go to the page you want to mark, and then click Bookmarks|Add Bookmark.


Bookmarks list

After you add bookmarks, you can view a list of them on the Bookmarks menu. Just open the Bookmarks menu, then click the bookmark of a page you want to see.


Bookmarks window

You can also use the Bookmarks window to arrange and organize your bookmarks. To open this window, click Window|Bookmarks.


Because bookmarks are such a powerful feature, Navigator offers many ways to create and organize a bookmark list. For more on bookmarks, see "Using history and bookmarks lists" and "Bookmarks window" in the Navigator Handbook.


Toolbar and Directory buttons


Toolbar buttons


Button Action
Back Displays the previous page in the history list. A history list contains pages you've viewed since you opened a Navigator window; when you close the window, the history list is discarded.
Forward Displays the next page in the history list. Forward is only available after you click Back or click a page in the history list
Home Displays your home page.
Reload Redisplays the current page. Netscape Navigator checks the network server to see if any change to the page has occurred since you first loaded it. If there's no change, the same page is loaded again. If there has been a change, the updated page is loaded.
Images Loads images into pages. Available when the Options|Auto Load Images menu item is unchecked (which indicates you've opted to load just a page's text and skip the graphics). If you decide to see images after the page has loaded, click Images.
Open Lets you enter a URL to display the specified page in the content area.
Print Displays a dialog box so you can print the content area of the current Navigator window.
Find Lets you search for a word or phrase in the current page.
Stop Halts any ongoing transfer of page information.


Directory buttons


Button Action
What's New? Displays a page of links to new pages on the Internet.
What's Cool? Displays a page of links to cool pages on the Internet.
Destinations Displays an introductory page that leads you to Internet directories and tools.
Net Search Displays a directory of Internet search engines.
Software Displays information on Netscape Navigator software upgrades.



Searching for information on the Internet

To look for information on a specific subject, or for a specific page, you can use a search engine (sometimes called a search utility). Click the Net Search directory button to see a page of available search engines. You can read descriptions of how they search (some search just page titles, headers or indexes, while others search entire pages). When you select a search engine, you can immediately link to it. Most search engines give you instructions and advice on how to perform an effective search.


Sending and receiving email

Before you can use email, you have to set up Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition to work with your service provider's mail server. Most likely, you've already done this in Account Setup Wizard. But for more information, see "Setting up email and news" in the Navigator Handbook.

The mail icon in the lower-right corner of the Netscape window indicates the status of your mail:


The Mail window

To use email, first click the mail icon to open the Mail window. You can also open the Mail window by clicking Window|Netscape Mail.



Resizing panes in the Mail window

As with other windows, you can resize the Mail window. You can also resize the panes within the window.



For more on the Mail window, see "Receiving and sending email" and "Using the Mail window" in the Navigator Handbook.


The Message Composition window

To display the Message Composition window, click File|New Mail Message or File|Mail Document, or one of several Toolbar buttons and menu items in the Mail and News windows. In a page, you can also display the Message Composition window by clicking on a page link or a button designed to initiate email.



For more information, see "Using the Message Composition window" and "Message Composition window" in the Navigator Handbook.


What's a newsgroup?

Many service providers automatically provide access to newsgroups on their news servers. Newsgroups are online discussions about an amazing range of topics. In fact, the range is so wide that you can probably find a newsgroup on any subject that has ever interested you. The discussions aren't necessarily "news;" they are participants' opinions, focused information, or some combination of both. Often this enormous collection of newsgroups is referred to as Usenet.

Before you can access newsgroups, you have to set up Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition to work with your service provider's news server. Most likely, you've already done this in Account Setup Wizard. But for more information, see "Setting up email and news" in the Navigator Handbook.

Finding a newsgroup

Sometimes you'll know the exact name of a newsgroup you want to see, and other times you'll want to browse a list. If you know an exact name:

  1. In the Navigator window, highlight all the text in the Location field by clicking the text once.
  2. Type news: followed by the complete newsgroup name. For example, you could type news:misc.jobs.offered in the location field.
  3. Press Enter.

To easily find and display this newsgroup again, you can subscribe to it. For more information, see "Exploring Usenet news" and "News Window" in the Navigator Handbook.

If you don't know the exact name of a newsgroup, or if you want to browse a list, you can use the News window. To display the News window, click Window|Netscape News.



For more information, see "Receiving and sending news" and "Using the News window" in the Navigator Handbook.

Subscribing to a newsgroup

Subscribing to newsgroups lets you limit the newsgroups visible in the News window. For more information, see "Exploring Usenet news" and "News Window" in the Navigator Handbook.


Creating and replying to newsgroup messages

You create and send newsgroup messages (also called "postings" or "articles") in the same window you use for email--the Message Composition window. See page 19 for more information. You can also see "Message Composition window" in the Navigator Handbook.


Personalizing Netscape Navigator

Although Netscape Navigator is preconfigured for easy use, you can customize it. Commands in the Options menu allow you to control these items:

For more information, see "Changing styles, fonts, and colors" and "Preferences Panels" in the Navigator Handbook.


Selecting a home page

You can designate your own home page (the page you view each time you start Netscape Navigator). Commonly, the home page initially designated in Netscape Navigator (the default) has this URL:

http://home.netscape.com/index.html

You can designate a page from a remote computer on the Internet (for example, a page of stock quotes), or a local page on your hard disk (for example, your bookmarks file is a page stored on your hard disk). To change your home page (or change back to the default), follow these steps:

  1. Click Options|General Preferences.
  2. Click the Appearance tab.
  3. Click the radio button next to Home Page Location.
  4. Then type the URL of the new home page you want. Alternatively, click the radio button Blank Page if you want your home page to be empty.
  5. Click OK.


The online Netscape Navigator Handbook

You can access the Navigator Handbook in two basic ways:

  1. Remotely, from Netscape's web site. With the Navigator window open, click Help|Handbook.
  2. Locally, from the files installed on your hard drive with Netscape Navigator Dial-Up Edition. Follow these steps to access the Handbook on your hard drive either before or after you open the Navigator window:

Using your local copy of the Handbook has advantages over a remote connection. A local copy is much faster because you don't have to wait for the Handbook to transmit over the Internet. You can also add bookmarks to your local Handbook. After you open your local copy and see a place you want to mark, click Bookmarks|Add Bookmark. Then use the Bookmarks window to view and organize your bookmarks. See page 14 for more information.


Addresses on the World Wide Web

Internet, Usenet, and World Wide Web addresses are slightly different. A simple Internet address is username@domainname where username can be your name, and domainname is the name of your service provider. Domain names can be quite long and usually refer to subgroups or departments in an organization. Typically, a domain falls into one of the following categories:

Usenet addresses look similar to Internet addresses, but the most general category appears first instead of last (for example, rec.pets.cats is about cats, but the general category is recreational). Newsgroups are organized into broad categories:

Web addresses are hypertext links to documents. Each page has a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) in the format protocol://computer/directory/file. A Web address begins with a protocol for the link, typically http (hypertext transport protocol) but also file, gopher, or FTP (File Transfer Protocol). The second part of the URL (after the //) is the computer address, a directory path for the computer, and a file name (.html or .htm extensions mean the document is a hypertext markup language document that contains links to other pages). Here are some sample URLs:

          http://home.netscape.com/index.html

          ftp://ftp.netscape.com/pub/

          news:news.announce.newusers


What's next

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