INTERNET
INTERNET
Thary Al-Ghrairi
Rule 1 - Be sure you know exactly what information you have to find.
The more exactly you know what you are looking for, the easier it will be to
find it.
This is related to Rule 1. Let's say you have to find out about Shackleton's third
journey to Antarctica. Do not just type in Shackleton. Type Shackleton third
journey Antarctica. You will get fewer results, but you can be confident that
these will be relevant to the information you need.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Suppose you had to find out which was the world's most dangerous animal.
Typing the most dangerous animal in Google returns almost 100 million hits. If
you enclose the phrase in quotation marks in "the most dangerous animal", you
get just over 600,000. This is still a huge number, but you can be more sure the
results will be relevant.
Imagine you are searching for information about the Hilton hotel organization.
If you just type in Hilton, you will get a huge number of pages with
information about Paris Hilton, a famous Hollywood star. If, however, you type
in Hilton -Paris, the search results will not include any pages about the actress.
In Google, the Advanced Search will help you use this (Boolean) logic
correctly; or you can read their help page. You could also ask your teacher or
librarian to show you.
Rule 5 - Learn how to skim the search hits for webpages worth
opening.
If you have used good keywords/keyword groups and correct Boolean logic,
you should have a not-too-long list of links that contain the information you are
looking for. These links come with one or two lines of information about the
webpage they lead to. If you read this information with some care, you can
avoid clicking on irrelevant pages. It is very time-wasting to wait a minute or
so for a page to load, only to find that it is useless to your needs.
Anyone can put information on the internet. Not all of the information is
correct or up-to-date. If you find a webpage that has unusual colors/fonts or
contains many spelling mistakes, you should be very careful about trusting the
information it contains. See if there are details about the author somewhere on
the website, or ask your teacher/librarian to advice.
Much of the information on the web that is in English will be very hard for
ESL students. An excellent idea is to research in your own language. You can
then read the corresponding information in English with a far better chance of
understanding it.
School libraries are full of books and other resources containing most of the
information you need. If you use a library book, you can usually be sure of its
reliability (although it may not be up-to-date). Libraries have access to
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
You can ask Google to show you only the pages that are written at a basic (or
intermediate, or advanced) level of difficulty. [Watch this video to learn how to
do this.]
Once you have found the information you are looking for, you will need to do
something with it. Often you will make notes on it before putting it into a piece
of writing of your own. In this case, be sure to keep the URLs (web addresses)
and titles of the web pages.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Search engines sift through text on Web pages using computer programs
called spiders. "Spiders" crawl on the "Web," get it?
Spiders are very fast but they can travel only through the hyperlinks that
connect Web sites. If a page isn't linked to any other pages, spiders can't
find it. The part of the World Wide Web that is not linked is called the
"invisible Web" or the "deep Web." It may contain information highly
relevant to your search. To find resources on the invisible Web, see "The
Invisible Web" and "Web Directories" sections of this guide.
Search engines don't know why you want information—they simply find
information according to the words you've entered. These results are not
recommendations; search engines don't rank their results by the content of
each site. They use mathematical equations (or algorithms) to rank them,
and the formula may have little to do with a site's legitimacy or value to
you.
Companies have gotten wise to the way that search engines work. This has
created an environment where Web pages are created and customized with
the goal of appearing near the top of a search engine’s results list regardless
of their credibility or usefulness. This practice is called "search engine
optimization," and it's one reason that not all of your search results will be
relevant or trustworthy.
There is more than one kind of search engine. General search engines, also
called “horizontal” search engines, search for all types of information.
“Vertical” search engines search only within certain topics. “Meta” search
engines search other search engines. Using the kind that does exactly what
you need can improve your search results.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
If you have trouble finding the information you want, ask yourself: Is my
keyword too general? Too specific? Are there useful synonyms? Could
related topics be more effective?
Do you get so many results that you can’t find the sites that answer your
question? Here’s how to reduce the number of results:
Use more than one word in your search. For example, type "chicken salad
sandwich" instead of just "sandwich."
Try to be more specific in your terms. If you want a panini, type "panini"
instead of "sandwich."
Use "and" instead of simply typing two words (for example, "soup AND
sandwich"), and your results will include only sites that contain both terms.
Use "not" to exclude certain terms from your results: "sandwich NOT
bologna."
Want more search results? Try using fewer words when you search. Typing
"Reuben sandwich" instead of "classic Reuben sandwich" will yield more
results. By using the term "or" and trying a few related words at once
("sandwich OR gyro OR panini"), you increase your results exponentially.
Each search engine’s index of sites is unique; each has a different formula
for spidering through them. This means there can be significant variation in
the results that different engines generate for the same search terms. For
example, visit the site Zuula. Zuula allows you to search across multiple
platforms by putting them all in one location. After entering your search
term, you'll be given a typical-looking results page. What makes it unique is
that by clicking the tabs listed across the top of the page, you'll be given the
results for your search term on each of the search engines listed. Google,
Yahoo, Live, Gig blast, Exalted, Alexia, Entire web, Mahalo and Mojeek
are all in one place.
Important!
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
You may not always get the results you are looking for so you will need to play
with searchable terms. Using more words in combination, and especially more
specific words will help. Be aware that not all websites that are found in the
results are appropriate to your search. Read the blurb under the result name on
the list before you click. In addition, do not click on anything that seems
inappropriate, too good to be true, or dangerous. Use your gut instinct before
you click. There are many websites out there on the Internet that will mislead
and try to take advantage of beginners. Use caution.
2)
a.What is the antivirus program
Introduction
Antivirus program alternatively referred to as an Antivirus Software, AVS,
antivirus, or just AV. An antivirus program is a software program designed to
protect your computer or network against computer viruses. If and when a
virus is detected, the computer will display a warning asking what action
should be done, often giving the options to remove, ignore, or move the file to
the vault and Anti-virus programs scan for viruses and related malware by
examining the files on your system for patterns of data that have been
identified as being viruses. On some regular basis the database of patterns the
programs use is updated to contain the latest information on known viruses.
What is Anti-Virus Software?
Anti-virus software is a program or set of programs that are designed to
prevent, search for, detect, and remove software viruses, and other malicious
software like worms, Trojans, adware, and more. These tools are critical for
users to have installed and up-to-date because a computer without anti-virus
software installed will be infected within minutes of connecting to the internet.
The bombardment is constant, with anti-virus companies update their detection
tools constantly to deal with the more than 60,000 new pieces of malware
created daily.
There are several different companies that build and offer anti-virus software
and what each offers can vary but all perform some basic functions:
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Answer
No. Antivirus companies know the risks involved when dealing with computer
viruses and the potential dangers of viruses getting out in the wild. Antivirus
companies do not hire people who've made viruses, and the whole concept of
antivirus companies creating viruses is a myth, urban legend and conspiracy
theory.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Answer
Below is a complete list, in alphabetical order, of companies who provide
antivirus programs and the platforms they provide protection for. Clicking on
the company link will take you to information about that company, including
their web page.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Vipre Yes No No No No
Webroot Yes No No No No
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
When you access the Internet, your computer sends a message over the Web
that uniquely identifies your computer and where it is located. This allows the
Information you’ve requested to be returned to you. Often, this requested
information carries with it unwanted hidden software created by hackers and
Online criminals. This software installs itself on your computer and can either
be just a nuisance or pose a more serious threat to you, your identity and
sensitive financial information. Usually the nuisances are visible and easy to
identify, while the more dangerous threats are typically invisible, silent, and
difficult to detect until it’s too late. The key to a safe, enjoyable Internet
experience understands the difference between what a threat is and what isn’t.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
Conclusion
1. Antivirus is a class of software that detects and cleans out virus infected
files while Internet Security is a suite of applications that aims to
protect users against threats from the internet
2. Internet Security suites usually include an antivirus application among
other programs
3. Internet security suites commonly includes a firewall, anti malware, anti
spyware, and email protection programs
4. Internet Security suites often cost more than stand-alone antivirus
applications
5. Antivirus as its name usually only has protection for virus and other
maliciоus sоftware like Trоjans and wоrms
6. Chооsing internet security оver antivirus is оnly a matter of chоice. But
you should remember that antivirus alоne cannot give you full
protection оver your PC.
7. The right comparison would be to compare an internet security with a
handful оf prоgrams cоmbined tоgether tо build a perfect matchup fоr
the former.
References
1) "What is antivirus software?". Microsoft.
2) Jump up "How Antivirus Software Can Slow down Your Computer".
Support.com Blog. Retrieved 07/26/10.
3) Jump up "Softpedia Exclusive Interview: Avira 10". Ionut Iliescu.
Softpedia. 14 April 2010. Retrieved 2011-09-11.
4) Jump up "Norton AntiVirus ignores malicious WMI instructions".Munir
Kotadia. CBS Interactive. 21 October 2004. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
5) Jump up Jump up Rhee, M. Y. (2003). Internet Security: Cryptographic
Principles, Algorithms and Protocols. Chichester: Wiley. ISBN 0-470-
85285-2.
6) Jump up Jump up Virtual Private Network
7) Jump up Jump up Network Virtual Terminal
8) Jump upJump up "HTTP - Hypertext Transfer Protocol Overview".
W3.org. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
9) Jump upJump up "What Is a Message Authentication Code?".
Wisegeek.com. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
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Assistant Lecturer Assad H. Thary Al-Ghrairi
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