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<TITLE>Netscape Handbook: Heartwarming Introduction</TITLE>
<A NAME="C0">
<B>
<FONT SIZE=+3>H</FONT><FONT SIZE=+2>eartwarming introduction</FONT>
</B></A>
<OL>
<A HREF="../index.htm">Netscape Handbook: Table of
Contents</A>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C1">Hey, Ma</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C2">On to Dad</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C3">Random access page-turner</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C4">Sister</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C5">My Sweetie</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C6">Who calls?</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C7">Brother</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C8">Dad discovers bookmarks</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C9">My sister, my search</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C10">Ma and ftp</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C11">Brotherly morass</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C12">Pages you can write on</a>
<LI><a href="intro.htm#C13">Speaking of goats</a>
</OL>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C1">
<FONT SIZE=+3>H</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ey, </FONT>
<FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>a</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hey, Ma. I got a new job. I'm no longer the night manager at
Lothario's House of Horrors in the Tenderloin. I'm writing a book
about the Internet.
<P>
Good for you, Tooey. Isn't that the same organization James Bond works
for?
<P>
Close, Ma, but no. This is information highway stuff, not a spy
thriller. This is a manual for a software program called Netscape so
when you turn on your computer something more intelligent happens
than flying toasters.
<P>
But last visit you were so proud to show us your flying toasters.
<P>
I know, Ma, but we've all got to grow. Netscape is real. It brings
information from computers around the world to your screen.
<P>
That's nice.
<P>
I mean it, Ma.
<P>
Dad and I like the aquarium fish more than the toasters with wings.
<P>
Ma, those are screen savers. Netscape brings real information.
<P>
Yes, Tooey, I'm sure it does. Why don't you tell your father about it?
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C2">
<FONT SIZE=+3>O</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>n to </FONT>
<FONT SIZE=+3>D</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ad</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hello, son. Mom told me you're working for the government.
<P>
No, not the government, Dad. The Internet got its start in the
government; now it's a term used to describe a collection of
computers worldwide that are connected in one way or another. It's a
network. No one owns the whole thing. It's more a collaboration among
all kinds of organizations and people to split the cost and
responsibilities of sharing information.
<P>
That reminds me, son. I read the book you gave me by that Toole guy, A
Confederacy of Dunces. Quite a hoot.
<P>
So I think you and Mom ought to try using Netscape. I can get you
connected to the Internet on your computer at home. Then you can
browse around to see what interests you.
<P>
Don't have much time for the computer these days. Am volunteering at
the hospital two days a week and the library one day week. Help out
at the USO Wednesday evenings. Play golf. Keep the house up. Take
your mother out to dinner. When I need to write something down, I
find it easier to pick up a pen.
<P>
Just try it, Dad. This isn't a crummy word processor that gives you
empty pages and a thick manual. With Netscape, your pages are filled
with information on topics you choose. Pages with color pictures and
nice text and maybe sounds or movies.
<P>
Yes, I know. Computers are the future. Show your mother how it works.
She's better than I am. She can make the toasters swim with the
colored fish.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C3">
<FONT SIZE=+3>R</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>andom access page-turner</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Here, Ma. I set everything up for you. You're looking at the Netscape
home page. To go somewhere, just point the mouse over any colored
text and click. You can always come back to where you were by
clicking on the <b> Back </b> button in this toolbar or selecting
<b>Back</b> from the <b>Go</b> menu. See these words <a
href="../index.htm">Netscape Handbook</a>? That's the book I'm
working on. Try clicking on it. Go on. Just point and click. That's
right. Now see the colors moving on this little indicator image. That
means the page you clicked on is being transferred from a remote
computer to your computer. Same thing with this status bar and these
messages in the status area. They are all feedback to tell you how
information you requested is coming from a server computer through an
Internet connection to your computer.
<P>
So I'm on the information highway. This is fun. How come your book is
only one page long?
<P>
There's more, Ma. You're just looking at the title and the table of
contents. Netscape brings you one page at a time. I could have put
the whole book in one long scrolling page but it's more efficient to
transport documents in smaller chunks. Maybe some people want to read
only the fun, folksy part. This way they can click on <a
href="intro.htm#C0">heartwarming introduction</a> to receive
just the section they want rather than the whole book.
<P>
I can't wait to read it, but I need to get my glasses. Sometimes I get
a headache trying to read on the screen. You wouldn't have a printed
copy, would you?
<P>
Yeah, I've got a printed copy. Netscape lets you change the size and
kind of text you see on screen, yet still I don't like reading long
documents on screen. I just want to show you how you can click on
certain words that are linked automatically to a new page. Click on
any of the highlighted words in the table of contents and you'll see
the page that is linked. Netscape works like a television remote
control except instead of channels you select pages. It's an
automatic, random access page-turner.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C4">
<FONT SIZE=+3>S</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ister</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hi Tooey. Ma says you took her for a ride on the information highway.
<P>
Yeah, but she wasn't wearing her glasses so she didn't see anything.
<P>
She said she had a good time.
<P>
I showed her how Netscape software works. It's pretty simple: you run
the program while connected to the Internet and you look at pages,
some with pictures and art as colorful as any magazine. Links you see
on one page can bring related information that's on another page. You
just click on colored words or pictures and, zoom, another page,
linked to the one you're seeing, comes flying into your computer from
the Internet. These interconnected pages are distributed on server
computers all over the world and Netscape is the software that brings
them to you.
<P>
Who makes the pages and, if they're on servers all over the world,
who makes the links between the pages?
<P>
That's exactly what everyone is trying to figure out. Right now,
pages are made by a bunch of Internet geeks who know how to get
information inside these server computers. But that's about to
change. More and more, pages and their links are going to be
personalized so that every individual can find the information they
want and publish information for others.
<P>
Do you like the people at your company?
<P>
So far. They seem cool: intense programmers, torn jeans and t-shirts,
working through the night, alternative rock, 3 AM trips to Denny's. I
doubt we'll have the same problem as when I contracted for the Pagan
Axle Research Center, you know, where their chief of engineering was
detained by the county for loudly explaining his proof of Fermat's
Last Theorem to a barbershop pole..
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C5">
<FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>y sweetie</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hey, pumpkin-girl. Are you free tonight?
<P>
A bit later, yes.
<P>
I was thinking of coming home early from work. Say, ten o'clock. You
want to come over?
<P>
How about if you come here?
<P>
Certainly.
<P>
Are you going to show me what's interesting on the Internet?
<P>
I'd rather drown in a bowl of cabbage soup than disappoint you.
<P>
You haven't yet. You know, your Mom called this morning. She asked for
you, but I think she wanted to talk to me. She also wanted to know
how to find the Internet discussion group about Northern Exposure. I
told her about news and newsgroups, the Internet's bulletin board
system. For an example, I had her type <B>news:alt.tv.*</B> in the
location field. After reminding her to press the return key, she got
the directory page listing all the <B>alt.tv</B> newsgroups and, sure
enough, she scrolled down and found the
<B>alt.tv.northern-exposure</B> link. Apparently, spent the rest of
the afternoon reading news articles describing the show's plots,
personalities, and predicted demise in more detail than any tv show
deserves. She called back an hour ago marveling at the thread that
analyzed the parallel between Northern Exposure and Green Acres: city
transplant enveloped in rural lore.
<P>
My mom is talking about threads? Where did she pick that up?
<P>
She wanted to know why the titles of some articles were indented in
outline format. I told her the indented items were responses, and
responses to responses, to mirror a conversation. I told her a thread
is Internet parlance for a conversation and that you could follow a
thread by pressing the right arrow key. Or jump to the next thread by
pressing the down arrow key. Your mom is on the net.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C6">
<FONT SIZE=+3>W</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ho calls?</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Ma, Martha told me you called the other morning. You know I'm never
awake in the mornings.
<P>
Maybe I wanted to talk to Martha. She told me about the alternative
newsgroups. Why do they call them alternative?
<P>
You don't want to know, Mom.
<P>
Oh, I saw all the newsgroups with the strange names. I would never
read those.
<P>
Me neither. There are plenty of other great <B>alt</B> groups. And
there
are tons of other categories besides <B>alt</B>. There's <B>rec</B> for
recreation, <B>sci</B> for science, <B>biz</B> for business, and
hundreds more. Martha said you liked the Northern Exposure articles.
<P>
I sent one in myself. I pressed the <B>Post Office</B> button and
mailed
a letter. It got me wondering: Which newsgroup is your book in? None of
the pages in the Northern Exposure newsgroup had nice pictures like
your book.
<P>
I think you mean the <B>Post Article</B> button, but hey. My book isn't
in a newsgroup. When you looked at my book and then looked at a
newsgroup, you were exploring two different areas of the Internet. My
book lives in the area that supports excellent pictures and sounds and
movies. The newsgroups live in an area that supports easy
back-and-forth communication. Maybe one day the areas will merge, but
right now the Internet is specialized, not geographically, but
according to protocols.
<P>
Who calls?
<P>
Protocols. Oh, never mind. The Internet brings you different kinds of
pages. Some, like the pages of my book, have the characteristics of
glossy magazines with clever links. Others, like the newsgroup pages,
resemble a community bulletin board posted with everybody's news and
opinions. Netscape brings you pages of either kind. You haven't read
my manual yet, have you?
<P>
Not yet, Tooey. But I will. I promise. Did you know a university
professor wrote in to ask who was the Northern Exposure equivalent of
Arnold Ziffel? Someone responded the moose, but I think the answer
goes deeper than that.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C7">
<FONT SIZE=+3>B</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>rother</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hey.
<P>
Hey.
<P>
You're writing again.
<P>
Yup. Someone's got to explain every arrogant, assaulting acronym the
industry has come up with in the last twenty years. Unless you've set
up your <B>smtp</B> and <B>nntp</B> servers, are comfortable using
<B>telnet</B>, can <B>ftp</B> <B>binhex</B>, <B>gif</B>, and
<B>jpeg</B> files, know the <B>url</B> of my <B>http</B> site, and want
to read my <B>html</B> pages on <B>www</B>.
<P>
You're working with a bunch of sick puppies. You know, the hospital
here has got an Internet connection. Should we be using your
software?
<P>
You bet. I've got Mom reading Web pages and newsgroups. I'm holding
off telling her about e-mail because I'm afraid she'll expect me to
write to her.
<P>
You're too late. She sent me e-mail last night. She was flaming
because, though Netscape can send mail, she has to use a separate
program to receive mail.
<P>
What? Mom's complaining about features?
<P>
Look, you were the one who bought her the computer. I suggested tai
chi lessons.
<P>
I guess Mom has filled you in then. Netscape software supports a bunch
of protocols with a single point and click interface. Foremost,
there's World Wide Web hypertext support for reading multimedia pages
like my manual. Then there's a built-in Internet newsreader that
follows threads and allows you to post your own articles. There is,
as Mom pointed out, a limited e-mail command that lets you compose
and send e-mail over the net. Plus, there's a bunch more. You can
transport files. Read gopher menus. Search WAIS databases. Hey,
Netscape takes virtually everything on the Internet and presents the
information on a page. To bring more information, you click on a
link, a button, or a menu item. It's not that simple, but it's
evolving into the jack-of-all-trades Internet application.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C8">
<FONT SIZE=+3>D</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ad discovers bookmarks</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Hey, Dad. Check this out.
<P>
Whoa. They let you do that?
<P>
This page is from the Museum of Modern Art. There's no single "they"
in the Internet. The closest thing to a "they" in the Internet is the
groundswell of users who voice opinions to those who abuse the
frontier spirit of interconnected computers. These scanned museum art
pieces are well within the bounds of net etiquette. On the other
hand, there's utter abhorrence for the huckster who sends unsolicited
advertising.
<P>
How can you tell this is from the museum?
<P>
See this code in the location field. It's a URL, short for Uniform
Resource Locator. Every page has a unique URL that serves as its
address. You can usually glean some information by interpreting some
of the letters between slashes and periods. This one has a name and
organization code <b>org</b> indicating the museum. On other
locations, the last couple letters refer to a country code.
<P>
What's the difference between a person's e-mail address and a page's
URL address?
<P>
Not much. They both designate a location, but are used for different
purposes. If you ask Netscape to bring an e-mail address, you're
going to get a message that there's no page to bring. Likewise, if
you ask Netscape to send mail to a page's URL, the page location has
no capacity to receive your mail. See these letters <B>http</B>?
That's a protocol for presenting richly formatted, multimedia pages.
The protocol <B>news</B> presents pages containing Internet newsgroup
articles. E-mail uses yet another protocol, <B>smtp</B>, that
presents information in the context of a personal mailbox rather than
a published page.
<P>
So how do you remember every address?
<P>
Some pages I've got memorized, but Netscape has a bookmark feature
that makes memorization unnecessary. Whenever you're looking at a
page, you can choose <B>Add Bookmark</B> from the <B>Bookmarks</B>
menu to append the title of the page to the <B>Bookmarks</B> menu.
Later, you can choose the title to bring the page. At its simplest,
the bookmark feature is a menu listing of page titles associated with
page URLs. You can choose the <B>View Bookmarks</B> option to
elaborate on your list of bookmarks in a window. In the window you
can group bookmarks under menu headings, create multiple lists, share
lists with other people, and otherwise help you keep track of a large
number of your favorite pages.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C9">
<FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>y sister, my search</FONT>
</A>
<P>
How long is the manual?
<P>
Too long. People have better things to do than read nonfiction. The
holier-than-thou voice of those who believe they are imparting truths
gives me the creeps. Man, there are some places in this universe
where nothing is the truth. Manuals writers need to recognize that
even nouns can drip like Salvador Dali's watch.
<P>
Are you doing okay, Tooey? You sound a little tired
<P>
The Internet is big, but big unto itself is no worthy grail. Bigness
is only an asset if you have proper filters to extract matters of
personal importance. Netscape can bring you more pages then you can
assimilate in a lifetime. How are you going to spend your hours
productively if the lyrics and harmony that enrich your life are
obscured with litter and noise? I crave more from my technology than
a heartless reference to a mind-numbing expanse.
<P>
Maybe you need a little time off. When was the last time you and
Martha went away?
<P>
We're making plans. I've been searching the net for a sign, an omen,
clues to nirvana. I checked under Netscape's <B>Directory</B> and
<B>Help</B> menus. That's what people need: a direction to go and
roadside attractions.
<P>
Links to spirituality? I've looked at all of Netscape's menu items.
There's <B>File</B>, <B>Edit</B>, <B>View</B>, <B>Go</B>,
<B>Bookmarks</B>, <B>Options</B>, <B>Directory</B>, and <B>Help</B>.
They and their button counterparts are tools to interact with the
Internet's resources. But tools are only tools. And the links you find
in the <B>Directory</B> and <B>Help</B> menus simply bring pages of
information supplied by indexers and writers such as yourself. The
Internet may become a reservoir of knowledge more profound and
nurturing than any modern day library, but get real, Tooey. The net,
like many of its nerdish contributors, remains crude and raw and
speckle-complected.
<P>
I must remember to restrain my dueling enthusiasm and vitriol. Choosing
an item from the <B>Directory</B> or <B>Help</B> menu brings a page of
information from the Internet. These are only starting points designed
to open my eyes to possibilities and opportunities. Sculpting beauty
from the mountains of digital detritus will come with time. I think for
now I should take your suggestion and call upon Martha to walk with me
in the twilight to the ice cream shoppe around the corner where the
youthful scoopers know us well and serve us double scoops for the price
of singles.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C10">
<FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>a and ftp</FONT>
</A>
<P>
I talked to your sister today. She said you sounded a little sad.
<P>
I've always been a little sad, Ma. I've had this wistful look since I
was eight years old.
<P>
She says you worry too much.
<P>
It's what I do best.
<P>
You need to have more fun.
<P>
Okay, tomorrow I'll have fun. I'll ignore my genetic predisposition
to carry the weight of the world on my shoulders and let nary an
anxious thought trouble me. How's your tv newsgroup doing?
<P>
Enough is enough with that Alaska town. I started looking at some
different pages. Sometimes when I click on a link, I get this message
about a file transfer something.
<P>
I can tell you've spent considerable time not reading my manual, Ma.
That's okay, I understand. Manuals induce catatonia.
<P>
I'm sure yours is good.
<P>
Don't bet the inheritance on it. Anyway, Netscape supports lots of
protocols which, ultimately, means different things happen when you
click on a link. The protocol for graphical pages, known as World
Wide Web pages, is different than the protocol for newsgroup pages.
Not only do the pages look a little different, you can see the
different protocol name in the location field. Web pages start with
the URL code <B>http:</B> whereas news pages start with <B>news:</B>.
The protocol for e-mail is different yet. But there's even more.
Another protocol that starts with <B>ftp:</B> is designed to let you
transfer files from remote computers to your computer. When you click
on a <B>ftp</B> link, Netscape brings a file to your computer's hard
disk. Whereas some protocols bring pages for viewing in Netscape;
<B>ftp</B> brings computer software files that reside independently
of the Netscape application. You've heard the phrase "downloading."
Well, links to <B>ftp</B> sites perform downloading automatically.
It's the way servers on the Internet distribute software.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C11">
<FONT SIZE=+3>B</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>rotherly morass</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Ma says you lost her trying to describe <B>ftp</B>. She knows it stands
for file transport protocol, but whenever she hears about protocols she
thinks she's supposed to curtsy the queen of England.
<P>
That's why I never bothered to mention Telnet, Gopher, Lynx,
Veronica, Archie, and WAIS. Eventually, I'll get around to proxies,
socks, and the helper applications.
<P>
What are those?
<P>
Just more peripheral stuff to learn if you want to enter the Internet
geekdom. Telnet is an application that lets you access a remote
computer and conduct an interactive session. You exchange information
by sitting and typing UNIX commands into a blank field. Netscape lets
you run Telnet easily, but you have to know what to type to achieve
any results.
<P>
And it goes down hill from there?
<P>
Gopher's another protocol that Netscape supports. Gopher servers
offer pages with menus, but they aren't as rich as Web pages. Lynx is
a program for browsing among servers but, unlike Netscape, supports
only text. Veronica is a program that searches Gopher sites. Archie
is a program that searches ftp sites. WAIS is server system
specialized for searching databases. Proxies, socks, and the helper
applications supplement the Netscape application: they are options
that let users adapt to particular computer configurations and
software requirements.
<P>
Netscape knows how to display most of the information on the
Internet, but not everything.
<P>
Yeah, for example, viewing software built into Netscape displays
images stored in the GIF and JPEG formats. But pages may contain
sounds or movies or compressed information that needs to be
interpreted by separate applications. Netscape maintains a directory
of helper applications that you ought to have on your disk drive.
When you click on a link that requires outside help, Netscape makes
the helper application automatically run.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C12">
<FONT SIZE=+3>P</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ages you can write on</FONT>
</A>
<P>
I noticed some pages have blanks for you to fill in.
<P>
That's right, Dad. Pages can contain forms. Forms can accept input
and, with the press of a button, transmit the input to an electronic
address.
<P>
So what you have is a page with a place inside for the user to write
e-mail.
<P>
Essentially, yes, though forms can take different kinds of input.
Forms may contain check boxes, radio buttons, pull-down menus, or
selection lists. Sometimes you'll find fields already filled in with
suggested text. When you are finished filling out a form, you send
it. Usually you just have to press a button because the e-mail
address of the recipient is predetermined by the form.
<P>
What happens to the form after you send it out to the Internet?
<P>
The input gets sent, not the form. The information you entered is
transmitted to a mailbox for a person to read or to a computer
capable of interpreting, and perhaps responding to, your input. A
form that produces an immediate response is common. Such a form
requests information that goes back to a server computer, the server
interprets the information you've entered on the form, then sends
back to you a page with information responding to your request. But
not all forms send back mail. Sometimes when you send a form, no
response is generated; the page with the form stays on your screen
and the fields may revert to their original state.
<P>
This whole business of forms sounds like an easy way for an
organization to take orders or get customer feedback or disseminate
information.
<P>
Just like paper forms, electronic forms provide a structure and
context for communicating information. When you're communicating to a
computer, this can translate to fast and expansive responses. Forms
are definitely cool.
<P>
I'd like to see a real estate form where you enter in the address of
a property for sale and you get back county clerk's records for the
house. You know how the realtors alway use flowery language to make a
house sound better than it is. Like cute instead of tiny. Like near
transportation instead of abutting a truck stop. The glossy brochure
that says "located atop a gently sloping hill" might appeal less
after an Internet search reveals that the previous occupant's Andean
goat plummeted following a faulty misstep.
<P>
<HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
<A NAME="C13">
<FONT SIZE=+3>S</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>peaking of goats</FONT>
</A>
<P>
Do you think Netscape and the Internet are important in the grand
scheme of things?
<P>
Martha. You know what happens when we start talking existentially.
<P>
The same as when we play crazy eights. An uncanny hunger for a
mushroom pizza.
<P>
Knowledge transfers more deliberately than computer bits. My fondness
of
the Internet is strongest when I get the sense I've entered someone
else's mind. Institutionalized information doesn't appeal to me like
the clever, intimate home pages of people expressing a small part of
themselves. The Internet lets you publish a portrait of yourself as you
choose, a freedom that printed pages or broadcast media can't grant
efficiently. Netscape makes the Internet less daunting: mostly by
consolidating the different protocols of electronic information, but
also by offering built-in "school supplies" like bookmark links that
let you organize your own repository. The combination of heartfelt
content and personalized tools makes a worthwhile contribution. I
certainly find the work more rewarding than my primary task in the
Tenderloin: coercing intoxicated patrons to refrain from fondling the
florescent appendages of a fourteen-foot ceramic Lizzie Borden.
<P>
Remember when we visited the little farm in Tilden park and you
talked to the Saint Albans goat?
<P>
Everyone needs on occasion to look to a higher power for guidance.
Scholarly minutia doesn't excite me and the spiritual path seems
incomplete without weekly TV listings. Youth provided me with artful
distractions until my liver cried uncle. I still see eidetic wisps
fluid in the blue of sky. Over-torqued visionaries spout Internet
glories, but only the lonely write sensible instructions on the use
of the heart. That goat studied me unblinkingly. She knew all she
needed.
<P>
You asked her, "How shall I proceed?"
<P>
She requested that I first feed her a choice morsel of corn, which I
did. Then her wise eyes answered, "I am goat who knows what I need to
know. You are something much uglier and should proceed with modesty."
<P>
We fed her more corn and walked among the live oak.
<P>
<BR>
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