Handbook: Onscreen Fundamentals

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  1. The Netscape window
  2. Window summary
  3. Content area, frames, and text fields
  4. Security indicators
  5. Document information
  6. Toolbar
  7. Directory buttons

The Netscape window

This section on onscreen fundamentals describes what you see in the main Netscape window. Most of the tools and text fields that help you to navigate the Internet are visible, though you have the option of hiding some tools in order to give more space on the screen to the content area.

The next section describes a window's graphical elements. Subsequent sections go into more detail on page displays and button actions. Subsequent chapters explore mail, news, bookmarks, primary menu items, preferences panels, and additional application features.

You can open multiple Netscape windows to view multiple pages of information. The title bar of the window shows the title of the currently loaded page. You'll also find that some pages are designed to be a patchwork of pages. These patchwork pages contain rectangular frames, each frame presents its own page information (similar to the picture-in-picture feature offered in some television sets).


Window summary


Content area, frames, and text fields


Security indicators

A document has one of three security states: secure, insecure, or mixed. The most prominent security indicator, located at the screen's bottom-left, is a doorkey on blue for secure documents and a broken doorkey on gray for insecure documents. The secure doorkey icon varies slightly depending on the grade of encryption: the doorkey has two teeth for high-grade and one tooth for medium-grade. The colorbar over the content area is blue for secure and gray for insecure. A mixed document, with insecure information omitted, is shown as secure.

A URL beginning with https:// shows that the document came from a secure server. To connect to an HTTP server that offers security, insert the letter "s" so that the URL begins with https://. Use http:// otherwise. Similarly, a news URL that starts with snews: (instead of news:) shows that the document comes from a secure news server (again, insert the letter "s" if your news server offers security). Use two slashes (//) after the colon (:) for news servers other than the default one. Chose the View|Document Info menu item for security details.

A secure document can only have inline information from secure sources. The insecure information on a mixed security document is replaced by a mixed security icon. Bringing a mixed security document to screen produces a notification dialog.

If a form appears on a secure page that has an insecure submit process, a notification dialog always appears. The warning states that although the document is secure, the submission you are about to make is insecure and could be compromised by a third party. If you are sending passwords, credit cards numbers, or other information you would like to keep private, it would be safer for you to cancel the submission.

If an insecure document contains secure information (either inline or as part of a form), no special action is taken. The document is considered insecure. This includes insecure forms with secure submission processes.

Several notification dialog boxes inform you about the security status of documents. You can choose whether or not to receive these dialogs by setting the panel items in Options|Security|Alerts (or by unchecking a dialog's Show this Alert Next Time box).

Notification dialog boxes


Document information

To view elements of a document's structure, composition, and security status, choose View|Document Info. The information, displayed in a separate Netscape window, helps you establish the document's authenticity and other security characteristics.

In the upper portion of the window, the document's structure is presented as a hierarchy of the component URLs (for example, the URLs of image files contained in the document). The lower portion of the window consists of several fields stating location, type, source, cache, length, modification, and character set encoding information, plus the particulars of a document's security status.

To interpret the security status of a document, you should verify that the information you see

If a document is insecure, the security information notifies you that encryption is not used and there is no server certificate. If a document is secure, the security information tells you encryption's grade, export control, key size, and algorithm type. In addition, the server certificate presents data that identifies Like documents, certificate information is protected by encryption to ensure authenticity and integrity. The data can include the following:


Toolbar


Directory buttons

Directory buttons can also be accessed from the Directory or Help menus.


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