2. E-MAIL
(ELECTRONIC MAIL)
It is a method of exchanging digital messages from
an author to one or more recipients.
Email servers accept, forward, deliver, and store
messages.
Three components
1.message envelope
- control information, including, minimally, an
originator's email address and one or more recipient
addresses
2. Message header
-information, including, minimally, an
originator's email address and one or more recipient
addresses
3.Message body.
3. BLOG
Discussion or
informational site
published on
the World Wide Web
(WWW) and
consisting of
discrete entries or
posts typically
displays the most
recent post appears
first
Types of blog
1.Personal blogs
2. Micro blogging
3. Corporate and
organizational blogs
4. By genre
5.By media type
6. By device
7. Reverse Blog
4. ONLINE CHAT
Communication over the Internet that offers a realtime transmission of text messages from sender to receiver.
It very short time in delivering the message of participants.
Online chat also has multicast communications from one
sender to many receivers and voice and video chat.
5. SOCIAL
BOOK MARKING
It is a centralizes online service which enables users to
add, annotate, edit, and share bookmarks of web documents.
Most of online bookmark management services have launched
since 1996.
Delicious- founded in 2003, Popularized the term “Social book
marking”
Tagging- significant feature of social bookmarking
systems, enabling users to organize their bookmarks in flexible
ways and develop shared vocabularies known as
“folksonomies”
6. URL
(UNIFORM RESOURCE LOCATOR)
It is specific character string character string that constitutes a
reference to a re
URL is technically a type of uniform resource identifier (URI),
but in many technical documents and verbal discussions, URL
is often used as a synonym for URI, and this is not considered
a problem.
URLs are commonly used for web pages (http:), but can also
be used for file transfer (ftp:), email (mailto:), telephone
numbers (tel:) and many other applications source
7. STREAMING
It is multimedia that is constantly received by and
presented to an end-user while being delivered by a
provider. Its verb form, "to stream", refers to the
process of delivering media in this manner; the term
refers to the delivery method of the medium rather
than the medium itself.
client media player can begin playing the data
(such as a movie) before the entire file has been
transmitted. telecommunications networks, as most
other delivery systems are either inherently
streaming (e.g., radio, television)
Non streaming - books, video cassettes, audio CDs
Live streaming - content delivered live over the
Internet, requires a camera for the media, an
encoder to digitize the content, a media
publisher, and a content delivery network to distribute
and deliver the content.
8. PODCAST
Podcast is also called net cast, It is a digital medium
consisting of an episodic series of audio, video, PDF, or ePub files subscribed to and downloaded through web
syndication or streamed online to a computer or mobile device.
9. VOIP
(VOICE OVER INTERNET PROTOCOL)
methodology and group of technologies for the delivery of voice
communications and multimedia sessions over Internet
Protocol (IP) networks, such as the Internet. Other terms
commonly associated with VoIP are IP telephony, Internet
telephony, voice over broadband (VoBB), broadband
telephony, IP communications, and broadband phone service.
VoIP is available on many smartphones, personal computers, and
on Internet access devices. Calls and SMS text messages may be
sent over 3G or Wi-Fi
10. WIKI
It is usually a web application which allows people to add, modify, or
delete content in collaboration with others. Text is usually written using a
simplified mark-up language or a rich-text editor. While a wiki is a type
of content management system, it differs from a blog or most other such
systems in that the content is created without any defined owner or
leader, and wikis have little implicit structure, allowing structure to emerge
according to the needs of the users.
The encyclopaedia project Wikipedia is the most popular wiki on the
public web in terms of page views, but there are many sites running many
different kinds of wiki software. Wikis can serve many different purposes
both public and private, including knowledge management, note
taking, community websites and intranets. Some permit control over
different functions.
Ward Cunningham, the developer of the first wiki software, WikiWikiWeb,
originally described it as "the simplest online database that could possibly
work.
"Wiki" (pronounced [ˈ
witi] or [ˈ
viti]) is a Hawaiian word meaning "fast" or
"quick".
11. SOCIAL NETWORKING
It is a social structure made up of a set of social actors and a
set of the dyadic ties between these actors. The social network
perspective provides a set of methods for analysing the
structure of whole social entities as well as a variety of theories
explaining the patterns observed in these structures.
The study of these structures uses social network analysis to
identify local and global patterns, locate influential entities, and
examine network dynamics.
12. WWW (WORLD WIDE WEB)
World Wide Web (abbreviated as WWW or W3, commonly
known as the web) is a system of interlinked hypertext
documents accessed via the Internet. With a web browser, one
can view web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and
other multimedia and navigate between them via hyperlinks.
13. HTML
(HYPERTEXT MARK-UP LANGUAGE)
HTML or Hypertext Mark-up Language is the main markup language for creating web
pages and other information that can be displayed in a web browser.
HTML is written in the form of HTML elements consisting of tags enclosed in angle
brackets (like <html>), within the web page content. HTML tags most commonly come in
pairs like <h1> and </h1>, although some tags represent empty elements and so are
unpaired, for example <img>. The first tag in a pair is the start tag, and the second tag is
the end tag (they are also called opening tags and closing tags). In between these tags
web designers can add text, further tags, comments and other types of text-based content.
The purpose of a web browser is to read HTML documents and compose them into visible
or audible web pages. The browser does not display the HTML tags, but uses the tags to
interpret the content of the page.
14. WEB FEED
A web feed (or news feed) is a data format used for providing users with frequently
updated content. Content distributors syndicate a web feed, thereby allowing users
to subscribe to it. Making a collection of web feeds accessible in one spot is known
as aggregation, which is performed by an aggregator.
A web feed is also sometimes referred to as a syndicated feed.
A typical scenario of web feed use is: a content provider publishes a feed link on their site
which end users can register with an aggregator program (also called a feed reader or
a news reader) running on their own machines; doing this is usually as simple as dragging
the link from the web browser to the aggregator.
Web feeds are operated by many news websites, weblogs, schools, and podcasters.