<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">

<html>

<head>

<title>Web Hosting Resources</title>

<LINK href="styles/styles.css" type=text/css rel=stylesheet>

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">

</head>



<body bgcolor="#EEF4FC" leftmargin="0" topmargin="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0">

<table width="100%" height="100%" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">

  <tr>

    <td width="100%" height="120" align="left" valign="top" background="images/bg.gif"><img src="images/title.jpg" width="770" height="120"></td>

  </tr>

  <tr> 

    <td align="center" valign="top"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">

        <tr> 

          <td width="200" height="10" align="left" valign="top"></td>

          <td height="10" align="center" valign="top"></td>

        </tr>

        <tr>

          <td class=links width="200" height="10" align="center" valign="top"><!--#include virtual="menu.shtml"--></td>

          <td height="10" align="center" valign="top"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">

              <tr>

                <td align="right" valign="top"><img src="images/smbg.gif" width="550" height="30"></td>

              </tr>

            </table>

            <table width="100%" border="0" align="left" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2">

              <tr bgcolor="#EEF4FC"> 

                <td align="left" valign="top" class="text"><p><a href="http://www.myaffiliateprogram.com/u/hostingm/b.asp?id=1107"><img src="banners/hm_banner11.gif" width="468" height="60" border="0"></a></p>
                  <table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
                    <tr>
                      <td><img src="images/glossary.gif" width="400" height="25"></td>
                    </tr>
                  </table>
                  <table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="7" cellspacing="1" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
                    <tr>
                      <td valign="top" bgcolor="#F2F2F2" class="text">

                <p align="center"><b><a  class="Mainlinks" href="#A">A</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#B">B</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#C">C</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#D">D</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#E">E</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#F">F</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#G">G</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#H">H</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#I">I</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#J">J</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#K">K</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#L">L</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#M">M</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#N">N</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#O">O</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#P">P</a>&nbsp; Q&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#R">R</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#S">S</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#T">T</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#U">U</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#V">V</a>&nbsp; 
                          <a class="Mainlinks" href="#W">W</a>&nbsp; <a class="Mainlinks" href="#X">X</a>&nbsp; 
                          Y&nbsp; Z</b></p>

                <p align="left"><b>.com</b><br>

                A domain name used by commercial enterprises. </p>

                <p><b>.gif</b><br>

                Pronounced jiff or giff (hard g) stands for graphics interchange 

                format, a bit-mapped graphics file format used by the World Wide 

                Web, CompuServe and many BBSs</p>

                <p><b>.jpg or .jpeg</b><br>

                Short for Joint Photographic Experts Group, and pronounced 

                jay-peg. JPEG can reduce files sizes to about 5% of their normal 

                size, although some detail is lost in the compression.</p>

                <p><b>.zip</b><br>

                File name extension for files compressed with PKZIP program or 

                similar. &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="A">Address</a></b><br>

                See URL.</p>

                <p><b>Apache Web Server</b><br>

                Often referred to as simply Apache, a public-domain open source 

                Web server developed by a loosely-knit group of programmers. The 

                first version of Apache, based on the NCSA httpd Web server, was 

                developed in 1995. Core development of the Apache Web server is 

                performed by a group of about 20 volunteer programmers, called 

                the Apache Group. However, because the source code is freely 

                available, anyone can adapt the server for specific needs, and 

                there is a large public library of Apache add-ons. In many 

                respects, development of Apache is similar to development of the 

                Linux operating system. Apache's major competitor is Microsoft's 

                IIS. </p>

                <p><b>Applet</b><br>

                A program designed to be executed from within another 

                application. Unlike an application, applets cannot be executed 

                directly from the operating system. With the growing popularity 

                of OLE (object linking and embedding), applets are becoming more 

                prevalent. A well-designed applet can be invoked from many 

                different applications.</p>

                <p><b>ASCII</b><br>

                Acronym for the American Standard Code for Information 

                Interchange. Pronounced ask-ee, ASCII is a code for representing 

                English characters as numbers, with each letter assigned a 

                number from 0 to 127. For example, the ASCII code for uppercase 

                M is 77. Most computers use ASCII codes to represent text, which 

                makes it possible to transfer data from one computer to another.</p>

                <p><b>ASP</b><br>

                Active Server Pages, a specification for a dynamically created 

                Web page with a .ASP extension that utilizes ActiveX scripting 

                -- usually VB Script or Jscript code. When a browser requests an 

                ASP, the Web server generates a page with HTML code and sends it 

                back to the browser. So ASPs are similar to CGI scripts, but 

                they enable Visual Basic programmers to work with familiar 

                tools.</p>

                <p><b>Authentication</b><br>

                Authentication is used to confirm the identity of the other 

                party involved in the data transmission.</p>

                <p><b>AVI</b><br>

                Audio/Video Interleave. Audio file format used by Microsoft 

                Widows.</p>

                <p><b>Backbone</b><br>

                Main high-speed network connection composing the Internet.&nbsp; 

                Backbones are operated by major telecommunications companies 

                like Sprint, MCI, or AT&amp;T.&nbsp; Internet backbone maps are here.&nbsp;&nbsp;

                </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="B">Bandwidth</a></b><br>

                The amount of data that can be transmitted in a fixed amount of 

                time.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Binary</b><br>

                Data represented in binary format uses only two digits - 0 and 

                1. </p>

                <p><b>Binary mode</b><br>

                FTP client mode used to transfer binary files (multimedia files, 

                executables and other data files). Not suitable for transferring 

                normal text files. </p>

                <p><b>Bit</b><br>

                (Binary DigIT) the smallest unit of information, comprising of 

                either a 1 or 0. </p>

                <p><b>Bit rate</b><br>

                The speed at which bits are transmitted over a communication 

                link. Expressed in bits per second (bps). </p>

                <p><b>Body</b><br>

                The part of an email message that contains the actual text of 

                the message. </p>

                <p><b>Bookmark</b><br>

                A way of storing a frequently visited website address. It is 

                then easier to access the website in the future.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Browser</b><br>

                Computer program that allows to search the World Wide Web and 

                displays the content of the webpages. Examples are Mosaic, 

                Netscape, Mozilla, Opera and Internet Explorer.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="C">C/C++</a></b><br>

                Popular programming languages (C++ includes objects) that can be 

                used to create server programs that run after compilation.&nbsp; C 

                and C++ were not designed specifically for web programming, but 

                they can still be useful, especially because mature compilers 

                producing very fast code and large code libraries already exist. 

                &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)</b><br>

                A style-sheet determines how the HTML document is displayed by 

                the browser. The current version of CSS is version 2 (CSS2). &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Certificate</b><br>

                Digital ID used for SSL transactions.&nbsp; It includes owner's 

                public key, the name of the owner, the issuer, hostname, and the 

                expiration date. </p>

                <p><b>Certificate Authority</b><br>

                A company trusted by a browser maker that issues digital 

                certificates that are supposed to guarantee that the company is 

                what it claims to be for use in encrypted digital transactions 

                though SSL.&nbsp; Verisign is the biggest certificate authority. </p>

                <p><b>CGI</b><br>

                Common Gateway Interface.&nbsp; A standard for interfacing web 

                servers with an executable application.&nbsp; A CGI program can be 

                written in any language like Perl or C/C++ and it is often 

                stored in a special directory like /cgi-bin.&nbsp; CGI is often used 

                to process data from HTML forms.</p>

                <p><b>cgi-bin</b><br>

                A directory on the server where the executable CGI scripts 

                reside.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Client</b><br>

                A computer program that requests a service from the server 

                program, usually over the network. </p>

                <p><b>Client/Server</b><br>

                A network architecture where a system is divided into two parts: 

                the client and the server. </p>

                <p><b>Clustering</b><br>

                Connecting many computers and making them appear as one machine. 

                This is done to increase reliability and performance. </p>

                <p><b>Co-location (colo)</b><br>

                Putting a web server in a dedicated facility that provides 

                high-speed Internet connection, security, environment, backup 

                power, and technical support.&nbsp; Unlike the dedicated server, the 

                client controls both hardware and software.&nbsp;&nbsp; </p>

                <p><b>Cobalt RaQ</b><br>

                Server appliance made by Cobalt specifically for hosting 

                companies.&nbsp; Newest RaQs are Linux-based and provide an 

                easy-to-use interface.&nbsp; RaQs have no features that can't be had 

                in a regular Linux box but they offer pre-installed programs and 

                Cobalt's support. Here is the discussion forum for RaQs. </p>

                <p><b>ColdFusion</b></p>

                <p>ColdFusion is an easy to use server-side 

                scripting language developed by Allaire.&nbsp; It comes with 

                ColdFusion Studio, a visual IDE.&nbsp; Here is Allaire's ColdFusion 

                page.&nbsp; Other popular server-side scripting languages are ASP. 

                Perl, PHP, TCL, Python, and JSP. </p>

                <p><b>Command-line interface</b><br>

                The opposite of the GUI (Graphical User Interface). A way of 

                interacting with a computer system using the keyboard and a 

                text-only display. Usually more powerful, but less user-friendly 

                thatn a GUI. </p>

                <p><b>Control Panel</b><br>

                Control panel included in web hosting packages is an online 

                web-based application that allows you to easily manage different 

                aspects of your account.&nbsp; Most control panels will let you 

                upload files, add email accounts, change contact information, 

                set up shopping carts or databases, view usage statistics, 

                etc.&nbsp;&nbsp; </p>

                <p><b>Cookie</b><br>

                A Cookie is a piece of data that is saved in the user's browser 

                by the web server. It is used to customize user's browsing 

                experience. </p>

                <p><b>CPU</b><br>

                Central Processing Unit. The most important part of the 

                computer. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="D">Data transfer</a></b></p>

                <p>In Web hosting, the total size of files 

                transferred by an account in a month.&nbsp; Sites with a lots of 

                graphics, downloads, or streaming audio or video and a lot of 

                visitors will require plans with more available transfer.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Database</b><br>

                Data in a structured format stored on a web server.&nbsp; Most 

                popular type is a relational database.&nbsp; The most common query 

                (information retrieval) language for relational databases is 

                SQL.&nbsp; Linux-based hosts most commonly include MySQL database and 

                Windows NT-based hosts usually include Access or MS SQL 

                databases. </p>

                <p><b>Dedicated Server</b><br>

                Similar to co-location, except that you lease or rent hardware 

                from a Web host.&nbsp; The main advantage over co-location is easier 

                upgrade and usually better support.&nbsp; Getting a dedicated server 

                or co-locating is necessary for sites that outgrow shared 

                servers because they use a lot of bandwidth and resources or 

                they require total control over software environment.&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>DHCP</b><br>

                (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol). An automated way of 

                obtaining an IP address in the Local Area Network. </p>

                <p><b>Dial up</b><br>

                Dialup access is a way of connecting a computer to the Internet 

                using a modem and the telephone line. It is rather slow and 

                blocks the telephone line. </p>

                <p><b>DNS</b><br>

                Domain Name System.&nbsp; Internet service that maps Internet domains 

                into corresponding IP addresses.&nbsp; DNS database is distributed 

                and replicated among many DNS servers, so when you change your 

                domain's IP address, the changes take a while to propagate.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Domain name</b><br>

                Domain name is an easy-to-remember address that can be 

                translated by DNS into server's IP address.&nbsp; Domain names are 

                hierarchical.&nbsp; Domain's suffix indicates which TLD (top level 

                domain) it belongs to, for example .com, .gov, .org, .net, or .jp.&nbsp; 

                Recently ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and 

                Numbers) added several new TLDs, like .biz, .pro., and .museum. 

                &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="E">E-Business</a></b><br>

                Using web and Internet technologies in conducting the business 

                activities. Also expanding end enhancing traditional business 

                practices by means of the Internet. &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Electronic Mail (E-Mail, email)</b><br>

                One of the most popular Internet services. Basically it's the 

                transmission of text based messages. An email message can also 

                contain more structured elements, like tables, images and 

                multimedia. It can also be used to send various data files, by 

                means of attachments. You have to have an email account in order 

                to be able to use this service.<br>

                <br>

                <b>Encryption</b><br>

                Encryption means encoding data using a cryptographic cipher. 

                Encrypted data can be read (decrypted) only by an authorized 

                entity.</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="F">FAQ</a></b><br>

                (Frequently Asked Question) Lists of frequently asked questions 

                and answers to them are used as a way of sharing knowledge on 

                the web. They are a very good way of finding solutions to 

                different problems. Some companies include them in their 

                websites to minimize the number of Customer Support inquiries. &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Fibre Optic Cable</b><br>

                A cable used for transmitting data as a light wave. A fiber 

                optic cable is composed of one or more optical fibers. It is 

                more expensive that copper wire, but offers higher transmission 

                speeds and allows for communication over larger distances. </p>

                <p><b>Filename extension</b><br>

                Last three or four letters of a file name that appear after the 

                dot. Used to designate the type of file and the format used. </p>

                <p><b>Filtering</b><br>

                Screening network packets for certain properties, such as the 

                source or destination address, protocol used or even a pattern 

                in the data. It is used in firewalls in order to decide if the 

                traffic is to be forwarded or rejected. Provides the basis for 

                network security.</p>

                <p><b>Finger</b><br>

                A Unix program used to display information about users of the 

                system. Can be used remotely. </p>

                <p><b>Firewall</b><br>

                Firewall refers to either software-only or separate software and 

                hardware combination that serves to protect an internal network 

                or a computer from attacks and unauthorized access by sitting 

                between the Internet and the internal network.&nbsp; </p>

                <p><b>FrontPage Extensions</b><br>

                Microsoft's server-side applications that lets users of 

                FrontPage Web site creation tool to incorporate &quot;web-bots&quot; that 

                perform pre-packaged function like full-text Web site searching 

                or adding a hit counter.&nbsp; FrontPage extensions are also 

                available for Unix-based operating systems but some hosts refuse 

                to use them because of potential security holes. </p>

                <p><b>FTP</b><br>

                File Transfer Protocol.&nbsp; The Internet protocol defining how to 

                download and upload files between a client and an FTP server.&nbsp; 

                Popular client FTP programs are CuteFTP and WS_FTP.&nbsp; Major 

                browser also have FTP capability. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="G">Gateway</a></b><br>

                A network device used to translate between two different 

                protocols. Used to interconnect two networks that use 

                incompatible protocols. </p>

                <p><b>GIF</b><br>

                (Graphics Interchange Format) A graphic file format invented by 

                Compuserve. One of the most widely used formats for internet and 

                web. Uses a lossless compression method, thus ensuring that the 

                quality of the image is not lowered. </p>

                <p><b>Gigabyte (Gb)</b><br>

                1024 Megabytes. </p>

                <p><b>Graphical User Interface (GUI)<br>

                </b>A way of interacting with the computer that relies on graphical 

                symbols. Most often requires a mouse. It is less powerful then 

                the command-line interface, but is more user friendly and is 

                easier to learn for users without technical background. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="H">Hit</a></b><br>

                In the WWW world &quot;hit&quot; is used to describe a single request made 

                by a web browser. The data transmitted by the web server in 

                response to the request is a text file or a binary file (images, 

                audio, video, executables and other data). </p>

                <p><b>Home Page</b><br>

                Main web page owned by a company, organization or an individual. 

                This is the page that is initially displayed when user makes a 

                request for a particular domain name. </p>

                <p><b>Host</b><br>

                A networked computer dedicated to providing a certain kind of 

                service. Usually refers to a computer that stores the website 

                files and has a web server running on it. </p>

                <p><b>HTML</b><br>

                (Hypertext Markup Language). It is the language in which web 

                pages are written. It allows the images to be combined with text 

                and offers wide range of formatting capabilities. One of the 

                most important features of HTML is hypertext, that allows web 

                pages to be liked one to each other. HTML relies on tags, which 

                have the following form: - an opening tag, - a closing tag. HTML 

                code is stored in a normal text file. </p>

                <p><b>HTTP</b><br>

                Hyper Text Transfer Protocol.&nbsp; The main protocol used to 

                transfer and receive data over the World Wide Web.&nbsp; The latest 

                version of HTTP is 1.1.&nbsp; Basic HTTP transaction involves a WWW 

                browser connecting to a server, browser sending a request to the 

                server specifying its capabilities and which document is 

                requested, server responding with the required data, and closing 

                of the connection.&nbsp; The overview of HTTP is here. </p>

                <p><b>Hub</b><br>

                A hub is a network device that is used for connecting computers 

                on a Local Are Network (LAN). It forwards all the packets it 

                receives to all of its ports. </p>

                <p><b>Hyperlink</b><br>

                A part of the web page that links to another web page. By 

                clicking on a hyperlink user redirects the browser to another 

                page. The word hyperlink is sometimes shortened to just &quot;link&quot;.

                </p>

                <p><b>Hypertext</b><br>

                A text on the web page that is linked to another webpage. 

                Browsers usually display hypertext as underlined and in blue 

                color. &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="I">IIS</a></b><br>

                Microsoft Internet Information Server.&nbsp; Microsoft's Web server 

                that comes built-in with Windows NT Server 4 and Windows 2000 

                server.&nbsp; Here is Microsoft's IIS web site. </p>

                <p><b>Image Map</b><br>

                An image displayed on the webpage that has different areas that 

                are hyperlinks. By clicking on different parts of the image 

                browser can be redirected to another webpage, or can display 

                modified version of the current one. </p>

                <p><b>Internet</b><br>

                Not to be confused with internet (with lowercase i). The word 

                Internet refers to all the computer networks worldwide that are 

                connected together. TCP/IP is the de facto standard protocol set 

                for Internet. <br>

                <br>

                <b>Internet backbone</b><br>

                An extremely fast network that connects major cities. Most often 

                it utilizes T3 circuits and provides the bandwidth of 45Mbps.

                </p>

                <p><b>InterNIC</b><br>

                The organization that handles domain name registrations. See 

                http://www.internic.net/ </p>

                <p><b>Intranet</b><br>

                A part of an organization's network that is private. Only 

                authorized individuals have access to the intranet. Besides that 

                an intranet is very similar to the Internet in a sense that it 

                offers the same services and uses the same protocols. </p>

                <p><b>IP</b><br>

                (Internet Protocol) is tha main protocol used on the Internet.

                </p>

                <p><b>IP Address</b><br>

                Internet Protocol Address.&nbsp; A unique number identifying all 

                devices connected to the Internet.&nbsp; This number is usually shown 

                in groups of numbers from 0 to 255, separated by periods, for 

                example&nbsp; 207.46.230.218. </p>

                <p><b>IP packet</b><br>

                IP packet is the basic data chunk that can be sent over the 

                Internet. All the data is partitioned into IP packets on the 

                sending computer and reassembled on the receiving computer. </p>

                <p><b>IRC</b><br>

                Internet Relay Chat.&nbsp; Multi-user chat service.&nbsp; IRC users can go 

                into public or private channels to discuss a topic or transfer 

                files.&nbsp; IRC servers are connected into networks.&nbsp; The most 

                popular IRC client program is mIRC.&nbsp; Many hosts are vary of 

                letting customers access IRC because of a possibility of a 

                denial of service attack on the whole network.&nbsp; </p>

                <p><b>ISP</b><br>

                Internet Service Provider.&nbsp; A company that provides its 

                subscribers with Internet access.&nbsp; Customers have a username and 

                a password and can dial-up or use a cable or DSL line to connect 

                to ISP's network which is connected to the Internet.&nbsp; The 

                biggest ISP is AOL. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="J">Java</a></b><br>

                Sun's popular programming language.&nbsp; Java is a 

                platform-independent (at least in theory), crash-protected, 

                object-oriented language that can be used to write applets that 

                run in a browser, servlets that run server-side, or independent 

                programs.&nbsp; Java's syntax is similar to that of C++. </p>

                <p><b>Java class files</b><br>

                The file or set of files that contain the code for a Java 

                applet. </p>

                <p><b>Java Servlet</b><br>

                Servlets are programs written in Java that run on a Web server 

                and can produce dynamic pages.&nbsp; Also see JSP. </p>

                <p><b>Java Virtual Machine (JVM, Java Runtime 

                Environment)</b><br>

                A set of programs that allow for Java applets to be run on a 

                particular computer system. </p>

                <p><b>JavaScript</b><br>

                Simple, client-side programming language created by Sun and 

                Netscape.&nbsp; JavaScript can be embedded in HTML pages to create 

                interactive effects and do tasks like validate form data. 

                &nbsp;JavaScript is a separate language from Java.&nbsp; All popular 

                modern browsers support JavaScript.&nbsp; A few hosts support 

                server-side JavaScript. </p>

                <p><b>JDBC</b><br>

                Java Database Connectivity - a mechanism allowing Java applets 

                to access different databases. </p>

                <p><b>JPEG</b><br>

                (Joint Photographic Experts Group) A image compression format 

                designed for the Internet. Uses lossy compression, meaning that 

                the quality of the image can be lowered. </p>

                <p><b>JScript</b><br>

                Microsoft's implementation of ECMAScript standard based on 

                JavaScript.&nbsp; Limited, object-based, interpreted scripting 

                language.&nbsp; Here is the official JScript site.&nbsp; JScript is 

                comparable to VBScript. </p>

                <p><b>JSP</b><br>

                Java Server Pages.&nbsp; Extension of Java Servlet technology for 

                combining Java server-side programs and HTML.&nbsp; JSP pages have an 

                extension .jsp.&nbsp; </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="K">Kbps</a></b><br>

                Kilobits per second. 1Kbps = 1024bps. &nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Kilobyte (Kb)</b><br>

                1024 bytes. <br>

                <br>

                <b>

                <a class="text" name="L">LAN</a></b><br>

                Local Area Network. A network of devices (computers, printers, 

                hubs) occupying a small area. Usually LANs do not span more than 

                one building. LANs are very fast compared to WANs. </p>

                <p><b>Linux</b><br>

                A free UNIX-like operating system developed by Linus Torvalds. 

                Linux and FreeBSD are very often used by hosting companies as 

                their operating systems. </p>

                <p><b>Login</b><br>

                An alias for an individual that is used for identification and 

                authentication when accessing a computer system. Usually it is a 

                sequence of characters and digits. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="M">MAC</a></b><br>

                Media Access Control. A network protocol used to control the 

                access to the network by different devices. </p>

                <p><b>MAC Address</b><br>

                Media Access Control address (also hardware or physical 

                address). Every device on the Local Area Network has an unique 

                MAC address. It is used to identify devices and to control 

                access to the network using MAC protocol. <br>

                <br>

                <b>Mailing List</b><br>

                A way of having a group discussion with list subscribers by 

                email.&nbsp; Emails are sent to all list subscribers.&nbsp; Popular 

                mailing list programs, like Listserv and Majordomo, allow for 

                automated subscription and un-subscription from a mailing list.&nbsp; 

                Some hosting plans allow creation of mailing lists. </p>

                <p><b>Mailserver</b><br>

                The Internet host (together with the appropriate software) that 

                is used to send, receive and forward email messages. </p>

                <p><b>MBps</b><br>

                MegaBytes (MB) per second, 1 MB = 1,048,576 bytes </p>

                <p><b>Mbps</b><br>

                Megabits (Mb) per second, 1Mb = 1,048,576 bits </p>

                <p><b>Megabyte (MB)</b><br>

                1MB = 1024 KiloBytes = 1,048,576 bytes </p>

                <p><b>MHz</b><br>

                MegaHertz = 1.000.000 Hertz </p>

                <p><b>Microsoft Access</b><br>

                Microsoft's low-end relational database included with the MS 

                Office suite.&nbsp; Here is the official site for Microsoft Access.&nbsp; 

                Cheaper NT hosting plans sometimes include MS Access database.

                </p>

                <p><b>Microsoft SQL Server</b><br>

                Microsoft's high-end SQL database running on Windows systems.&nbsp; 

                Here is the official Microsoft SQL Server site. </p>

                <p><b>MIME</b><br>

                (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) a method of including 

                binary data and other multimedia content within email messages.

                <br>

                <br>

                <b>Mirror site</b><br>

                An FTP site that stores the exact content of some other site. 

                Mirroring is done in order to minimize the load on a particular 

                server and also to increase reliability. </p>

                <p><b>MP3</b><br>

                An extremely popular lossy audio compression format. Widely used 

                over the Internet. </p>

                <p><b>MPEG</b><br>

                (Motion Picture Experts Group) video compression format for 

                movies or animations. </p>

                <p><b>mSQL (Mini SQL)</b><br>

                Light-weight relational database.&nbsp; Here is mSQL home page. </p>

                <p><b>Multicast</b><br>

                A message that is sent to a specific group of hosts. </p>

                <p><b>MySQL</b><br>

                Most popular open-source relational database.&nbsp; Many Unix-based 

                plans allow MySQL databases.&nbsp; Here is MySQL home page. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="N">Network</a></b><br>

                A group of electronic devices connected together that are able 

                to communicate with each other. </p>

                <p><b>Newsgroup</b><br>

                A virtual Internet place where people exchange thoughts, ideas 

                and interests, amuse themselves and do a zillion other things, 

                all by means of text messages. </p>

                <p><b>Newsreader</b><br>

                An application that allows to use newsgroups. <br>

                <br>

                <b>NIC</b><br>

                Network Interface Card - a part of the computer hardware 

                responsible for connecting a particular machine to the local 

                area network. </p>

                <p><b>NNTP</b><br>

                (Network News Transfer Protocol) An Internet protocol that 

                describes how the newsgroups messages are distributed, stored, 

                posted and retrieved. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="O">OC-1, OC-3, OC-12, OC-24, OC-48</a></b><br>

                Optical Carrier transmission speeds, used in fiber optic 

                networks conforming to SONET standard.&nbsp; OC-1 is 51.85 Mbps.&nbsp; 

                Higher levels are multiples of that speed. </p>

                <p><b>ODBC</b><br>

                (Open Database Connectivity) A standard allowing applications to 

                access different databases in an uniform way. </p>

                <p><b>Offline</b><br>

                The state of the computer when it is not connected to the 

                network (i.e. it is not online). </p>

                <p><b>Online</b><br>

                The state of a computer when it is connected to the network and 

                communicate with other machines. </p>

                <p><b>Operating system</b><br>

                A software heart of the computer. It is a set of programs that 

                manage the hardware resources of a computer, provide the 

                environment for application programs to run and provide the user 

                interface. Most known operating systems are: different flavors 

                of Unix (SunOs, HP-UX, Irix, FreeBSD, Linux,...), MacOS and 

                Windows. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="P">Perl</a></b><br>

                Open source CGI scripting programming language.&nbsp; Written in 

                1987.&nbsp; Still one of the most popular web programming languages 

                mostly due to its powerful text-manipulation facilities.&nbsp; A huge 

                number of Perl scripts are available for download. </p>

                <p><b>PHP</b><br>

                PHP is an free, open-source server-side scripting language.&nbsp; PHP 

                code can be embedded in HTML.&nbsp; PHP files usually have extensions 

                like .php or .php3.&nbsp; PHP language style is similar to C and 

                Java.&nbsp; Here is the PHP group web site.&nbsp; Other popular 

                server-side scripting languages are ASP, Perl, ColdFusion, TCL, 

                Python, and JSP. </p>

                <p><b>Plug-in</b><br>

                An add-on piece of software that can extend the features of an 

                existing application. For example Netscape browser plug-ins 

                allow displaying of new types of web content, that the browser 

                can't display on its own.</p>

                <p><b>POP</b><br>

                Post Office Protocol.&nbsp; Popular but inflexible email retrieval 

                standard.&nbsp; All messages are downloaded at the name time and can 

                only be manipulated on a client machine.&nbsp; Current version is 

                POP3.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Port</b><br>

                A socket on the computer or other network device used to connect 

                it to the network.</p>

                <p><b>Protocol</b><br>

                A set of rules by following which two parties can communicate. 

                The TCP/IP protocol suite is the basis of todays Internet. </p>

                <p><b>Python</b><br>

                Interpreted programming language, sometimes offered by hosts for 

                server-side scripting.&nbsp; Here is the Python home page. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="R">RAID</a></b></p>

                <p>Redundant Array of Independent (or 

                Inexpensive) Disks.&nbsp; Type of disk, often used on servers, where 

                several physical disks are combined into an array for better 

                speed and fault tolerance.</p>

                <p>Level 0 implements data striping where file 

                blocks are written to separate drives.&nbsp; Does not provide fault 

                tolerance, because failure of one drive will result in data 

                loss.</p>

                <p>Level 1 implements data mirroring.&nbsp; Data is 

                duplicated on two drives either through software or hardware.&nbsp; 

                Provides faster read performance than a single drive.</p>

                <p>Level 2 - not used in practice.&nbsp; Data is 

                split at bit level at written to multiple drives.</p>

                <p>Level 3 - requires at least 3 drives.&nbsp; Data 

                block is striped at byte level across drives and error 

                correction codes (parity info) is recorder on another drive.&nbsp; 

                Provides fault tolerance but slower writing performance.</p>

                <p>Level 4 - Similar to Level 3 but provides 

                faster performance because it uses blocks for striping.</p>

                <p>Level 5 - Similar to Level 4 but improves 

                performance but also striping parity info across multiple 

                drives.</p>

                <p>Level 6 - Similar to Level 5 but also uses 

                second parity scheme for better fault tolerance.</p>

                <p>Level 7 - Proprietary RAID design by 

                Storage Computer Corporation.&nbsp; Faster than other levels because 

                it uses multiple levels of cache and asynchronous I/O transfers.</p>

                <p>In addition multiple RAID levels can be 

                combined to improve performance or reliability. </p>

                <p><b>Raw Logs</b><br>

                Raw access data updated in real-time that can be downloaded and 

                used by any statistics program.&nbsp; Typically each line show the 

                user's IP, date and time of the access, what kind of request was 

                done, which document was requested, HTTP status code, bytes 

                transferred, referrer, and user agent info.&nbsp; If a host doesn't 

                have statistics, you'll need access to raw logs to identify who 

                your site's visitors are.&nbsp; Analyzing raw logs can also provide 

                more detailed look at site accesses than stats. </p>

                <p><b>Reseller</b><br>

                Resellers are usually smaller companies that still try to build 

                their customers base.&nbsp; They don't own the server with user 

                accounts but can perform most administrative functions. </p>

                <p><b>Router</b><br>

                A network device (can be a dedicated computer) that is used to 

                connect two or more networks together and route packets between 

                them. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="S">S/MIME</a></b><br>

                Secure Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions - a way of making 

                email messages more secure. S/MIME uses digital certificates to 

                attest the message origin and encryption to ensure that message 

                could not be read while in transit. </p>

                <p><b>Scripting Language</b><br>

                A programming language in which programs are the series of 

                commands that are interpreted and then executed one by one. 

                Doesn't require the compilation phase, for the price of lower 

                performance.</p>

                <p><b>Search engine</b><br>

                An Internet service that stores a vast number of web pages and 

                allows for fast searching among them. Also, a piece of software 

                that implements a website search functionality. </p>

                <p><b>Server</b><br>

                A networked computer that handles client requests for Web pages.

                </p>

                <p><b>Service Provider</b><br>

                A company that provides access to the Internet, usually for a 

                fee. </p>

                <p><b>Session</b><br>

                All the data exchange between two parties, starting when the 

                connection is established and ending when connection terminates.

                </p>

                <p><b>Setup fee</b><br>

                Initial fee charged by a host to set up your hosting account.&nbsp; 

                You can use our Price Search to minimize your costs over a 

                period of time including the setup fee. </p>

                <p><b>Shopping Cart</b><br>

                Software that allows users to select products from a Web 

                catalog, modify their choices, calculate prices, review their 

                choices, and order them.&nbsp; Many hosts with e-commerce plans offer 

                installed shopping carts, but you can always get a shopping cart 

                of your choice instead.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>SHTTP</b><br>

                Secure HTTP. A version of HTTP protocol that uses encryption to 

                assure that the traffic between the server and the browser 

                cannot be eveasdropped on. Should be considered mandatory for 

                all e-commerce applications. </p>

                <p><b>Signature</b><br>

                A few lines of text that are automatically attached at the end 

                of each email message by the email client. Usually it's some 

                personal identification or an (un)interesting quote. </p>

                <p><b>Signed applet<br>

                </b>An applet that has a digital signature to 

                confirm that it originates from the legitimate server.</p>

                <p><b>SMTP</b><br>

                Simple Mail Transfer Protocol.&nbsp; Very popular protocol used to 

                transfer email messages across the Internet mail servers. </p>

                <p><b>Spam</b><br>

                Unsolicited email sent in mass quantities to multiple receipents, 

                most often for marketing purposes. Highly annoying and 

                constituting one of the most serious netiquette violations. </p>

                <p><b>SQL</b><br>

                Structured Query Language.&nbsp; Limited programming language used 

                for updating and performing queries on relational databases.&nbsp; 

                All databases share a common subset of SQL.&nbsp; Most popular SQL 

                databases available with hosting plans are MySQL and MS SQL. </p>

                <p><b>SSH</b><br>

                Secure Shell.&nbsp; Developed by SSH Communications Security, it is a 

                standard for encrypted terminal Internet connections.&nbsp; SSH 

                programs provide strong authentication and encrypted 

                communications, replacing less secure access methods like 

                telnet. </p>

                <p><b>SSI</b><br>

                Server-Side Includes.&nbsp; Instructs the server to include some 

                dynamic information in a Web page before it is sent to a 

                client.&nbsp; This dynamic information could be current date, an 

                opinion poll, etc.&nbsp; Many hosts require that SSI pages have .shtml 

                extension to reduce the load on servers by not having to parse 

                non-SSI pages. </p>

                <p><b>SSL</b><br>

                Secure Sockets Layer.&nbsp; Protocol developed by Netscape to provide 

                encryption for commercial transactions data that should be 

                protected while traveling over the Internet, like credit card 

                numbers.&nbsp; SSL uses https protocol.&nbsp; Before using SSL in 

                commerce, you'll also need to get is a certificate from a 

                Certificate Authority.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Static (or dedicated) IP</b><br>

                If a host offers a static IP, it means that your site will be 

                assigned a unique and unchanging IP address.&nbsp; See the FAQ for 

                some possible advantages of using a static IP. <br>

                <br>

                <b>Streaming</b><br>

                Playing multimedia files (audio and video) without requiring a 

                full download.&nbsp; Audio and video are compressed but they still 

                may require a lot of bandwidth.&nbsp; Most popular streaming media 

                formats are Real Audio/Video. </p>

                <p><b>Subdomain</b><br>

                Subdomain is a way to divide your site into sections with short 

                and easy to remember names.&nbsp; For example, a section of this site 

                for new users could be at newbies.webhostingratings.com.&nbsp; Other 

                use of subdomains might be to let somebody else use your account 

                (but this may not be allowed by your host's terms of use).&nbsp; 

                Large websites might make their subdomains point to another 

                server to reduce load on the main www site. </p>

                <p><b>Surfing</b><br>

                Using world wide web is often referred to as &quot;surfing the web&quot;.</p>

                <p><b>Switch</b><br>

                A switch is a network device that forwards packets. Switches are 

                more intelligent than hubs in a sense that they forward packets 

                only to the necessary ports and not to all the ports.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="T">T1</a></b><br>

                Dedicated telecommunications line providing 1.5 Mbps of 

                bandwidth.&nbsp; Consists of 24 individual channels 64 Kbps each, 

                that can be configured for voice or data transmission.&nbsp; T1 lines 

                can be leased by businesses that required a dedicated Net 

                connection of with higher reliability than a DSL and faster than 

                an ISDN line but are still quite expensive. </p>

                <p><b>T3</b><br>

                Dedicated telecommunications line providing 44 Mbps of 

                bandwidth.&nbsp; T3 lines are often used by ISPs to connect to the 

                Internet backbone. </p>

                <p><b>TCP</b><br>

                (Transmission Control Protocol) is the most important of the 

                network protocols used in the Internet. </p>

                <p><b>TCP/IP</b><br>

                (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). This protocol 

                suite is the de facto standard for the today's Internet. TCP is 

                a higher level protocol that runs on top of the IP protocol. </p>

                <p><b>Telnet</b><br>

                Character-based protocol for connecting with remote systems.&nbsp; 

                Still popular among hosts, but it is being replaced by much more 

                secure SSH access. </p>

                <p><b>Terabyte (TB)</b><br>

                1024 gigabytes.</p>

                <p><b>Traceroute</b><br>

                A computer program that lists network hosts visited by a packed 

                on the way to its destination. Very useful for network 

                debugging. </p>

                <p><b>Traffic</b><br>

                Data packets being transmitted over a network. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="U">Unix</a></b><br>

                A family of multi-user operating systems, first developed by 

                AT&amp;T Bell Laboratories in the 1970s and then licensed to many 

                universities.&nbsp; A basis for Linux, a very popular operating 

                system among web hosts. </p>

                <p><b>UPS</b><br>

                Uninterruptible Power Supply.&nbsp; UPS keeps the server running on a 

                battery for several minutes after a power outage, allowing for a 

                clean shutdown without loss of data.&nbsp; UPS can also shield the 

                server from line voltage spikes and drops. </p>

                <p><b>URL</b><br>

                Abbreviation of Uniform Resource Locator, the global address of 

                documents and other resources on the World Wide Web.</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="V">VBScript</a></b><br>

                Microsoft Visual Basic Scripting Edition.&nbsp; Interpreted scripting 

                language (subset of MS Visual Basic language) for creating 

                scripts that can be embedded in HTML pages or for creating 

                ActiveX Controls.&nbsp; Meant as an alternative to JavaScript.&nbsp; Here 

                is the official VBScript site.&nbsp; VBScript is comparable to 

                JScript.&nbsp;</p>

                <p><b>Virus</b><br>

                A virus is a malicious program written to do as much harm as 

                possible. Viruses can spread themselves over the network. </p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="W">WAV</a></b><br>

                An audio file format. Very accurate, but offers no compression, 

                thus resulting in very large files. </p>

                <p><b>Webmaster</b><br>

                A person responsible for the maintenance of a particular 

                website. </p>

                <p><b>Whois</b><br>

                An Internet service allowing to obtain the information about the 

                domain name owner. </p>

                <p>Wide Area Network (WAN)<br>

                A set of computers that are to far apart to constitute a LAN. In 

                fact, WANs are very often composed of a number of Local Area 

                Networks interconnected together. </p>

                <p><b>WWW</b><br>

                World Wide Web (or Web) is the most popular Internet service. It 

                allows access to the information and services from the web 

                servers. A web browser is needed to use the Web.</p>

                <p><b><a class="text" name="X">XML</a></b><br>

                Extensible Markup Language.&nbsp; A meta-language, abbreviated 

                version of SGML, used to specify other document types used on 

                the Web.&nbsp; Accepted as a format in 1998 to replace dependence on 

                HTML extensions.&nbsp; MSIE 5.5 and Netscape 6 both support XML.</p>

                <p><b>XML processor</b><br>

                A program that can XML documents and access their content. <span style="font-size: 12.0pt; font-family: Times New Roman"><br>

&nbsp;</span></td>

                    </tr>
                  </table>
                  
                </td>

                <td class="text" width="200" align="center" valign="top">
<script type="text/javascript"><!--
google_ad_client = "pub-5070460282354958";
google_ad_width = 120;
google_ad_height = 600;
google_ad_format = "120x600_as";
google_ad_channel ="4759334828";
google_color_border = "EEF4FC";
google_color_bg = "EEF4FC";
google_color_link = "35275C";
google_color_url = "35275C";
google_color_text = "35275C";
//--></script>
<script type="text/javascript"
  src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js">
</script>
</td>

              </tr>

            </table></td>

        </tr>

        <tr align="left">

          <td width="200" height="20" valign="top">&nbsp;</td>

          <td height="20" align="center" valign="top">&nbsp;</td>

        </tr>

      </table></td>

  </tr>

  <tr> 

    <td class=copyright "100%" height="15" align="center" valign="middle" bgcolor="#402C5D">&copy; 

      Copyright 2003 Web Hosting Resources. All rights reserved. </td>

  </tr>

</table>

</body>

</html>
