2169 lines
100 KiB
Plaintext
2169 lines
100 KiB
Plaintext
[Note: Both parts of this FAQ have been combined into one file for this
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archive.]
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Archive-name: www/faq/part1
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Last-modified: 1995/26/1
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WORLD WIDE WEB FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
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This is part 1 of a 2-part posting.
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Part 2 begins with section 5 (providing
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information to the web). It should be the next
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posting in this thread.
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This document resides on the World Wide Web on Sunsite (URL is
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http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/faq/www_faq.html ).
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If you are unfamiliar with the term "URL", read on and learn!
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Last update: 1/26/95
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Contents
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* 1: Recent changes to the FAQ
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* 2: Information about this document
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* 3: Elementary Questions
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+ 3.1: What are WWW, hypertext and hypermedia?
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+ 3.2: What is a URL?
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+ 3.3: What are SGML and HTML?
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+ 3.4: How does WWW compare to gopher and WAIS?
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+ 3.5: Are there books about the web?
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* 4: Accessing the Web (User Questions)
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+ 4.1: Introduction: How can I access the web? (Even by email!)
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+ 4.2: Browsers Accessible by Telnet
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+ 4.3: Obtaining browsers
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o 4.3.1: MS Windows, IBM OS/2 and MS Windows NT browsers
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o 4.3.2: MSDOS browsers
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o 4.3.3: Macintosh browsers
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o 4.3.4: Amiga browsers
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o 4.3.5: NeXTStep browsers
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o 4.3.6: X/DecWindows (graphical UNIX, VMS) browsers
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o 4.3.7: Text-based Unix and VMS browsers
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o 4.3.8: VM/CMS browsers
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o 4.3.9: Batch-mode "browsers"
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+ 4.4: How can I access the web through a firewall?
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+ 4.5: What is on the web?
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o 4.5.1: How do I find out what's new on the web?
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o 4.5.2: Where is the subject catalog of the web?
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o 4.5.3: How can I search through ALL web sites?
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+ 4.6: How can I save an inline image to disk?
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+ 4.7: How can I get sound from the PC speaker with WinMosaic?
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+ 4.8: I have a Windows PC (or a Macintosh). Why can't I open
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WAIS URLs?
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+ 4.9: I'm running XMosaic. Why can't I get external viewers
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working?
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+ 4.10: Hey, I know, I'll write a WWW-exploring robot! Why not?
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+ 4.11: How do I send newsgroup posts in HTML to my web client?
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+ 4.12: I can't get SLIP. I want Mosaic. Is there a way? (YES!)
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* 5: Providing Information to the Web (Provider Questions)
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+ 5.1: How can I provide information to the web?
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+ 5.2: Obtaining Servers
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o 5.2.1: Unix Servers
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o 5.2.2: Macintosh Servers
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o 5.2.3: MS Windows, IBM OS/2 and MS Windows NT Servers
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o 5.2.4: MSDOS and Novell Netware Servers
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o 5.2.5: VMS Servers
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o 5.2.6: Amiga Servers
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o 5.2.7: VM/CMS Servers
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o 5.2.8: Yeah, but which is best?
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+ 5.3: Producing HTML documents
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o 5.3.1: Writing HTML directly
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o 5.3.2: HTML editors
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o 5.3.3: Converting other formats to HTML
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o 5.3.4: Checking your HTML for errors
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+ 5.4: How do I publicize my work?
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+ 5.5: Can I buy space on an existing server?
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+ 5.6: How fast does my net connection have to be?
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+ 5.7: Advanced Provider Questions
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o 5.7.1: How do I set up a clickable image map?
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o 5.7.2: How do I make a "link" that doesn't load a new
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page?
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o 5.7.3: Where can I learn how to create fill-out forms?
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# 5.7.3.1: How can I create hidden fields in forms
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(keeping state)?
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# 5.7.3.2: How can users email me through their
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browsers?
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o 5.7.4: How do I comment an HTML document?
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o 5.7.5: How can I create decent-looking tables and stop
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using <PRE>...</PRE>?
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o 5.7.6: What is HTML Level 3 and where can I learn more
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about it?
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o 5.7.7: How can I make interlaced and transparent GIFs?
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And what are they?
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o 5.7.8: How come mailto: URLs don't work?
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o 5.7.9: How can I restrict and control access to my
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server?
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o 5.7.10: Which format is better for WWW images, JPEG or
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GIF?
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o 5.7.11: How can I mirror part of another server?
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o 5.7.12: How can I keep robots off my server?
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o 5.7.13: How can I keep statistics about my web site?
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o 5.7.14: How can I generate web pages on the fly from a
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program?
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# 5.7.14.1: How can I generate GIF images on the fly
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from my CGI programs?
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* 6: Where can I discuss the Web?
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+ 6.1: USENET Newsgroups
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+ 6.2: Mailing Lists
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* 7: I want to know more.
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* 8: Credits
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1: RECENT ADDITIONS AND CHANGES TO THE FAQ
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* Added htmlchek to validation section
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* Added information on interlaced GIFs
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* Added information on the WN Server
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* Added information on CGI script authoring
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* Added information on the gd GIF-generating library
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* Updated email links section
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* More books!
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* Slipknot section updated
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* GLACI-HTTPD, a WWW server for Novell Netware
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* WWW mailing lists section
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* Updated URL for Gabriel White's HTML editor reviews
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* IBM OS/2 WebExplorer
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* MapMaker: From xv's Visual Schnauzer to an imagemap
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* Added comp.infosystems.www.announce
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* Added the Arena browser
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2: INFORMATION ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
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This is an introduction to the World Wide Web project, describing the
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concepts, software and access methods. It is aimed at people who know
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a little about navigating the Internet, but want to know more about
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WWW specifically. If you don't think you are up to this level, try an
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introductory Internet book such as Ed Krol's "The Whole Internet" or
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"EFF's Guide to the Internet". The latter is available electronically
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by anonymous FTP from ftp.eff.org in the directory
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pub/Net_info/EFF_Net_Guide.
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This informational document is posted to news.answers,
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comp.infosystems.www.users, comp.infosystems.www.providers,
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comp.infosystems.www.announce, comp.infosystems.www.misc,
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comp.infosystems.gopher, comp.infosystems.wais and alt.hypertext every
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four days (please allow a day or two for it to propagate to your
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site). The latest and best version is always available on the web as
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http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/faq/www_faq.html , and is mirrored in
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Japan (URL is
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http://www.glocom.ac.jp/mirror/sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/faq/www_faq.htm
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l ). (see section 3.2, "What is a URL?" to understand what this term
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means.) If you run a mirror site which automatically mirrors this
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document, please submit the URL for inclusion in the list of mirrors.
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Thanks to both Sunsite and Glocom.
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This document is also available by anonymous FTP from ftp.netcom.com
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in the directory pub/bo/boutell/faq.
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In addition, the most recently posted version of this document is kept
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on the news.answers archive on rtfm.mit.edu in
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/pub/usenet/news.answers/www/faq. For information on FTP, send e-mail
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to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with:
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send usenet/news.answers/finding-sources
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in the body (not subject line) of your message, instead of asking me.
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If you want the HTML version but are located behind a firewall, you
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can acquire it from CERN's WWW email server. Send mail to
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listproc@www0.cern.ch with the following single line in the body
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(leave the subject blank):
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source http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/faq/www_faq.html
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Thomas Boutell maintains this document. Feedback about it is to be
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sent via e-mail to boutell@netcom.com.
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In all cases, regard this document as out of date. Definitive
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information should be on the web, and static versions such as this
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should be considered unreliable at best. The most up-to-date version
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of the FAQ is the version maintained on the web. Please excuse any
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formatting inconsistencies in the posted version of this document, as
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it is automatically generated from the on-line version.
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3: ELEMENTARY QUESTIONS
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3.1: What are WWW, hypertext and hypermedia?
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WWW stands for "World Wide Web". The WWW project, started by CERN (the
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European Laboratory for Particle Physics), seeks to build a
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distributed hypermedia system.
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The advantage of hypertext is that in a hypertext document, if you
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want more information about a particular subject mentioned, you can
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usually "just click on it" to read further detail. In fact, documents
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can be and often are linked to other documents by completely different
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authors -- much like footnoting, but you can get the referenced
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document instantly!
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To access the web, you run a browser program. The browser reads
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documents, and can fetch documents from other sources. Information
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providers set up hypermedia servers which browsers can get documents
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from.
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The browsers can, in addition, access files by FTP, NNTP (the Internet
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news protocol), gopher and an ever-increasing range of other methods.
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On top of these, if the server has search capabilities, the browsers
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will permit searches of documents and databases.
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The documents that the browsers display are hypertext documents.
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Hypertext is text with pointers to other text. The browsers let you
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deal with the pointers in a transparent way -- select the pointer, and
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you are presented with the text that is pointed to.
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Hypermedia is a superset of hypertext -- it is any medium with
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pointers to other media. This means that browsers might not display a
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text file, but might display images or sound or animations.
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3.2: What is a URL?
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URL stands for "Uniform Resource Locator". It is a draft standard for
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specifying an object on the Internet, such as a file or newsgroup.
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URLs look like this: (file: and ftp: URLs are synonymous.)
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* file://wuarchive.wustl.edu/mirrors/msdos/graphics/gifkit.zip
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* ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/mirrors
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* http://info.cern.ch:80/default.html
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* news:alt.hypertext
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* telnet://dra.com
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The first part of the URL, before the colon, specifies the access
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method. The part of the URL after the colon is interpreted specific to
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the access method. In general, two slashes after the colon indicate a
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machine name (machine:port is also valid).
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When you are told to "check out this URL", what to do next depends on
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your browser; please check the help for your particular browser. For
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the line-mode browser at CERN, which you will quite possibly use first
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via telnet, the command to try a URL is "GO URL" (substitute the
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actual URL of course). In Lynx you just select the "GO" link on the
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first page you see; in graphical browsers, there's usually an "Open
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URL" option in the menus.
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3.3: What are SGML and HTML?
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Documents on the World Wide Web are written in a simple "markup
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language" called HTML, which stands for Hypertext Markup Language. See
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section 5.3 for more information about creating HTML documents for use
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on the web.
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SGML is a much broader language which is used to define particular
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markup languages for particular purposes. HTML is just a specific
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application of SGML. You can learn more about SGML, and the rationale
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behind HTML, by reading A Gentle Introduction to SGML (URL is
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http://etext.virginia.edu/bin/tei-tocs?div=DIV1%26id=SG ), a document
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provided by the Text Encoding Initiative. (Note: Some browsers
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apparently crash on this URL. There's nothing wrong with the document;
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try another browser if you have problems.)
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3.4: How does WWW compare to gopher and WAIS?
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While all three of these information presentation systems are
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client-server based, they differ in terms of their model of data. In
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gopher, data is either a menu, a document, an index or a telnet
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connection. In WAIS, everything is an index and everything that is
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returned from the index is a document. In WWW, everything is a
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(possibly) hypertext document which may be searchable.
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In practice, this means that WWW can represent the gopher (a menu is a
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list of links, a gopher document is a hypertext document without
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links, searches are the same, telnet sessions are the same) and WAIS
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(a WAIS index is a searchable page, returning a document with no
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links) data models as well as providing extra functionality.
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World Wide Web usage grew far beyond Gopher usage in the last few
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months, according to the statistics-keepers of the Internet backbone.
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(Of course, World Wide Web browsers can also access Gopher servers,
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which inflates the numbers for the latter.) WWW has long since reached
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critical mass, with new commercial and noncommercial sites appearing
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daily.
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3.5: Are there books about the web?
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Yes, quite a few. A brief list follows. New entries are solicited.
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Please include ISBN numbers and/or ordering information.
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The Mosaic Handbook (Mac, Windows and X editions)
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From O'Reilly. A short, sweet guide to the World Wide Web from
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a Mosaic user's perspective. Mac and Windows versions Include
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Enhanced NCSA Mosaic on floppy disk; the X Window System
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version includes NCSA Mosaic on CD-ROM. Telnet or gopher to
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gopher.ora.com (log in as gopher) or find details on the web
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(URL is http://gnn.com/ora/ ). Wherever fine X Window System
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books and Nutshell Guides are sold.
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The World Wide Web Unleashed
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From Sams Publishing. By John December and Neil Randall.
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Additional chapters contributed by others; I wrote the chapter
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on HTML editors and filters. Covers both user and provider
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issues in detail. Supporting pages available on the web (URL is
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http://www.rpi.edu/~decemj/works/wwwu.html ). 1057 pages. ISBN:
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0-672-30617-4. Call 1-800-428-5331 or +1-317-581-3500 for
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ordering information.
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Spinning the Web: How to Provide Information on the Internet
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From Van Nostrand Reinhold. By Andrew Ford. Oriented toward
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those with an interest in putting their data on the web. ISBN:
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1-850-32141-8 (New York), 0-442-01962-9 (London). Available in
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December 1994.
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Teach Yourself Web Publishing with HTML in a Week
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From Sams Publishing. By Laura Lemay. Also oriented toward
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those who plan to publish materials on the web. ISBN:
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0-672-30667-0. 400 pages. Includes information on setting up
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servers and handling forms results as well as HTML writing and
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editing. (URL is: http://slack.lne.com/lemay/theBook/index.html
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) Available December 22nd, 1994. Call 1-800-428-5331 or
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+1-317-581-3500 for ordering information.
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The HTML Manual of Style
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From Ziff-Davis Press. By Larry Aronson. Chapters: introduction
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to the WWW, the HTML language, writing HTML documents, and HTML
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examples. 120 pages. Available in December 1994.
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The Internet via Mosaic and World-Wide Web
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From Ziff-Davis Press. By Steve Browne. Details on obtaining
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Mosaic and Trumpet Winsock, getting it all set up, and what to
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do with it once it works. A chapter of interesting sites on the
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Web as well. ISBN: 1-56276-259-1.
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MOSAIC Quick Tour
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From Ventana Press. By Gareth Branwyn. A good guide to
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installing and using NCSA Mosaic under Windows. Includes basic
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HTML and trouble-shooting chapters. "More hand-holding than the
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FAQ and gives lots of details." - Mari J. Stoddard
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Managing Internet Information Services
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From O'Reilly and Associates. By Cricket Liu, Jerry Peek, Russ
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Jones, Bryan Buus & Adrian Nye. A good choice for those who
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will be installing and maintaining WWW servers; also includes
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documentation on HTML, imagemaps and the like. Also covers
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other types of Internet services.
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Hands-On Mosaic: A Guide for Window Users
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From Prentice Hall. By Dr. David Sachs & Henry Stair. ISBN:
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0-13-172321-9.
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HTML Authoring for Fun & Profit
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From Prentice Hall. By Mary Morris. Jan 1995. ISBN:
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0-13-359290-1.
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NCSA Mosaic Handbook
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From Prentice Hall. By Amy K. Kreiling & Frank Baker. Jan 1995.
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ISBN: 0-13-196692-8.
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Plug-n-Play Mosaic for Windows
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From Sams. By Angela Gunn. ISBN 0-672-30627-1. 300 pages. Disks
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include a special version of Enhanced NCSA Mosaic for Windows
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with built-in TCP/IP Winsock and dialer, and an automated
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configuration program (hence "plug-n-play"). The book is an
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introduction to Mosaic and the Web with some coverage of
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creating a home page and HTML and, of course, the obligatory
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directory of Web sites.
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Using Mosaic
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From Que. Ed. by Que Development Group. ISBN: 0-7897-0021-2.
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Covers NCSA Mosaic for Windows and the Macintosh.
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Using the World Wide Web
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From Que. Ed. by Que Development Group. ISBN: 0-7897-0016-6.
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Mosaic User's Guide
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From MIS Press. By Bryan Pfaffenberger. ISBN: 1-55828-409-5.
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Using Mosaic for Windows
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From Electric Avenue Press. By Stephen Gauer. ISBN:
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0-969-8853-0-X.
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4.1: Introduction: how can I access the web?
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You have three options: use a browser on your own machine (the best
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option), use a browser that can be telnetted to (not as good), or
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access the web by email (the least attractive, but for some it's the
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only way). It is always best to run a browser on your own machine,
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unless you absolutely cannot do so; but feel free to telnet to a
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browser for your first look at the web, or use email if the telnet
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command does not work on your system (try it first!). Note that
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"your machine" can be defined as a system you dial into from home,
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such as netcom or another account provider. Running a text-based
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browser on such a system is still preferable to telnetting to a
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faraway site.
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The following sections cover telnetting to a browser and obtaining
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your own browser; if neither of these are possible for you (because
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you have only an email-and-news connection to the Internet), here is
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how to access a web page by email:
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Send email to server@mail.w3.org (preferred) or to
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listserv@info.cern.ch (older address if the first fails) containing
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the following single line. (What you put on the subject line doesn't
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matter; blank is OK. This line should go in the text of the message.)
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You will receive as a reply a simple page intended to help you learn
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more about the Web.
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send http://www.earn.net/gnrt/www.html
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4.2: Browsers accessible by telnet
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An up-to-date list of these is available on the Web as
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http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/FAQ/Bootstrap.html and should be
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regarded as an authoritative list.
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telnet.w3.org
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A telnettable browser provided by the W3 coalition.
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www.cc.ukans.edu
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Offers Lynx, a full screen browser which requires a vt100
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terminal. Log in as www. Does not allow users to "go" to
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arbitrary URLs, so GET YOUR OWN COPY of Lynx and install it on
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your system if your administrator has not done so already. The
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best plain-text browser, so move mountains if necessary to get
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your own copy of Lynx!
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www.njit.edu
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(or telnet 128.235.163.2) Log in as www. A full-screen browser
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in New Jersey Institute of Technology. USA.
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www.huji.ac.il
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A dual-language Hebrew/English database, with links to the rest
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of the world. The line mode browser, plus extra features. Log
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in as www. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.
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sun.uakom.cs
|
|
Slovakia. Has a slow link, only use from nearby.
|
|
|
|
info.funet.fi
|
|
(or telnet 128.214.6.102). Log in as www. Offers several
|
|
browsers, including Lynx (goto option is disabled there also).
|
|
|
|
fserv.kfki.hu
|
|
Hungary. Has slow link, use from nearby. Login is as www.
|
|
|
|
4.3: Obtaining browsers
|
|
|
|
The preferred method of access of the Web is to run a browser
|
|
yourself. Browsers are available for many platforms, both in source
|
|
and executable forms. Here is a list generated from the authoritative
|
|
list, http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Clients.html .
|
|
|
|
4.3.1: MICROSOFT WINDOWS BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOTE: Most of these browsers require that you have SLIP, PPP or other
|
|
TCP/IP networking on your PC. The sole exception is SlipKnot, which
|
|
has limited features but operates well without a proper Internet
|
|
connection. SLIP or PPP can be accomplished over phone lines. You can
|
|
do this one of two ways: using a proper SLIP account, which requires
|
|
the active cooperation of your network provider or educational
|
|
institution, or using The Internet Adapter (section 4.12), a product
|
|
which simulates SLIP through your dialup Unix shell account. If you
|
|
only have non-Unix based dialup shell access, or have no PC at home,
|
|
your best option at this time is to run Lynx on the VMS (or Unix,
|
|
or...) system you call, or telnet to a browser if you cannot do so.
|
|
|
|
Cello Browser from Cornell LII. Available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.law.cornell.edu in the directory /pub/LII/cello.
|
|
|
|
Mosaic for Windows
|
|
From NCSA. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in
|
|
the directory PC/Windows/Mosaic.
|
|
|
|
WinWeb
|
|
From EINet. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.einet.net in
|
|
the directory /einet/pc/winweb as the file winweb.zip.
|
|
|
|
Netscape
|
|
From Mosaic Communications Corp (URL is:
|
|
http://home.mcom.com/info/index.html ). Downloads and displays
|
|
images incrementally while you read pages, which also display
|
|
incrementally, making it the best browser at the time of this
|
|
writing for those who connect to the web via modems. Also
|
|
supports many extensions to HTML, although not all conform to
|
|
the proposed standard. Netscape is a commercial product but can
|
|
be evaluated free of charge for an unlimited period of time by
|
|
individuals. Netscape supports some of the official extended
|
|
HTML tags as well as its own variations. The 16-bit version
|
|
works under both OS/2 and Windows. Available by anonymous FTP
|
|
from the following sites (use the mirror closest to you; see
|
|
the URL above for the latest list):
|
|
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.mcom.com/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.uu.net/networking/info-service/www/mcc/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/net/infosys/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.icsi.net/pub/packages/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.sandia.gov/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://lark.cc.ukans.edu/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.jsc.nasa.gov/pub/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.meer.net/pub/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/Netscape/
|
|
|
|
Spry Mosaic
|
|
From Spry. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.spry.com in the
|
|
directory AirMosaicDemo as the file AMOSDEMO.EXE. Spry Mosaic
|
|
is a commercial product but a demonstration version is
|
|
available and can be registered inexpensively. Works under
|
|
Windows and OS/2. Supports the mailto: URL, transparent GIFs,
|
|
ALT tags, hierarchical hotlists, etc.
|
|
|
|
Booklink
|
|
From Booklink. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.booklink.com
|
|
in the directory lite; this is a demonstration version of the
|
|
full browser, which costs $99. Booklink can open many
|
|
simultaneous connections in different windows and display
|
|
images and pages progressively; at the time of this writing it
|
|
is the only browser to equal Netscape in this area. The "lite"
|
|
version can only open two simultaneous connections, however.
|
|
|
|
SlipKnot
|
|
SlipKnot is the only graphical WWW browser that operates
|
|
entirely without SLIP, PPP, an Ethernet connection, or special
|
|
server-side software (but consider TIA, section 4.12 for
|
|
another workaround). SlipKnot supports multiple fonts, inline
|
|
images, and review of documents you have already received while
|
|
new documents arrive, and it operates entirely through your
|
|
regular Unix shell account. SlipKnot does not require that
|
|
you install any new software on your Unix shell account.
|
|
(However, it is lacking certain important features as a result,
|
|
such as forms and validation; this will keep you from accessing
|
|
some web pages. SlipKnot does support the <ISINDEX> tag, which
|
|
many sites support as a simpler alternative to forms.) You can
|
|
obtain SlipKnot by anonymous FTP from ftp.netcom.com in the
|
|
directory pub/pbrooks/slipknot or from oak.oakland.edu in the
|
|
directory SimTel/win3/internet. For more information, see the
|
|
SlipKnot information page (URL is
|
|
http://www.interport.net/slipknot/slipknot.html ) or send a
|
|
blank email message to slipknot@micromind.com.
|
|
|
|
IBM OS/2 WebExplorer
|
|
A native IBM OS/2 web browser. WebExplorer is a multithreaded
|
|
application and replaces the usual "back" and "forward" buttons
|
|
with a visual map of your exploration of the web. IBM
|
|
WebExplorer can be acquired by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp01.ny.us.ibm.net in the directory pub/WebExplorer/ .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3.2: MSDOS BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOTE: These browsers require that you have SLIP, PPP or other TCP/IP
|
|
networking on your PC. SLIP or PPP can be accomplished over phone
|
|
lines. You can do this one of two ways: using a proper SLIP account,
|
|
which requires the active cooperation of your network provider or
|
|
educational institution, or using The Internet Adapter (section 4.12),
|
|
a product which simulates SLIP through your dialup Unix shell account.
|
|
If you only have non-Unix based dialup shell access, or have no PC at
|
|
home, your best option at this time is to run Lynx on the VMS (or
|
|
Unix, or...) system you call, or telnet to a browser if you cannot do
|
|
so.
|
|
|
|
DosLynx
|
|
DosLynx is an excellent text-based browser for use on DOS
|
|
systems. You must have a level 1 packet driver, or an emulation
|
|
thereof, or you will only be able to browse local files;
|
|
essentially, if your PC has an Ethernet connection, or you have
|
|
SLIP, you should be able to use it. DosLynx can view GIF
|
|
images, but not when they are inline images (as of this
|
|
writing). See the README.HTM file at the DosLynx site for
|
|
details. You can obtain DosLynx by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp2.cc.ukans.edu in the directory pub/WWW/DosLynx; the URL is
|
|
ftp://ftp2.cc.ukans.edu/pub/WWW/DosLynx/.
|
|
|
|
4.3.3: MACINTOSH BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOTE: These browsers require that you have SLIP, PPP or other TCP/IP
|
|
networking on your PC. SLIP or PPP can be accomplished over phone
|
|
lines. You can do this one of two ways: using a proper SLIP account,
|
|
which requires the active cooperation of your network provider or
|
|
educational institution, or using The Internet Adapter (section 4.12),
|
|
a product which simulates SLIP through your dialup Unix shell account.
|
|
If you only have non-Unix based dialup shell access, or have no PC at
|
|
home, your best option at this time is to run Lynx on the VMS (or
|
|
Unix, or...) system you call, or telnet to a browser if you cannot do
|
|
so.
|
|
|
|
Mosaic for Macintosh
|
|
From NCSA. Full featured. Available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the directory Mac/Mosaic.
|
|
|
|
Netscape
|
|
From Mosaic Communications Corp (URL is:
|
|
http://home.mcom.com/info/index.html ). Downloads and displays
|
|
images incrementally while you read pages, which also display
|
|
incrementally, making it the best browser at the time of this
|
|
writing for those who connect to the web via modems. Also
|
|
supports many extensions to HTML, although not all conform to
|
|
the proposed standard. Netscape is a commercial product but is
|
|
free for personal use by individuals. Version 0.9 (available to
|
|
the public as of this writing) does not support printing, but
|
|
this is promised in the forthcoming version 1.0. Contrary to
|
|
popular myth, version 1.0 will be free for personal use, just
|
|
like version 0.9. Available by anonymous FTP from the
|
|
following sites (use the mirror closest to you; see the URL
|
|
above for the latest list):
|
|
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.mcom.com/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.uu.net/networking/info-service/www/mcc/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/net/infosys/Mosaic_Comm/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.icsi.net/pub/packages/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.sandia.gov/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://lark.cc.ukans.edu/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.jsc.nasa.gov/pub/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.meer.net/pub/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/Netscape/
|
|
|
|
Samba From CERN. Basic. Available by anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch
|
|
in the directory /ftp/pub/www/bin as the file mac.
|
|
|
|
MacWeb
|
|
From EINet. Has features that Mosaic lacks; lacks some features
|
|
that Mosaic has. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.einet.net
|
|
in the directory einet/mac/macweb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3.4: AMIGA BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
AMosaic
|
|
Browser for AmigaOS, based on NCSA's Mosaic. Supports older
|
|
Amigas as well as the newer machines in the latest versions;
|
|
available for anonymous ftp from max.physics.sunysb.edu in the
|
|
directory /pub/amosaic, or from aminet sites in
|
|
/pub/aminet/comm/net. see the site for details. See the URL
|
|
http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/AMosaic/home.html .
|
|
|
|
Emacs-W3
|
|
The Emacs-W3 browser works under Gnu Emacs on the Amiga (see
|
|
section 4.3.7).
|
|
|
|
4.3.5: NEXTSTEP BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: NeXTStep systems can also run X-based browsers using one of the
|
|
widely used X server products for the NeXT. The browsers listed here,
|
|
by contrast, are native NeXTStep applications.
|
|
|
|
SpiderWoman
|
|
A brand-new (as of 12/94), multithreaded, graphical browser for
|
|
NeXTStep. Available by anonymous FTP from sente.epfl.ch in the
|
|
directory pub/software.
|
|
|
|
OmniWeb
|
|
A World Wide Web browser for NeXTStep. The URL for more
|
|
information is http://www.omnigroup.com/; you can ftp the
|
|
package from ftp.omnigroup.com in the /pub/software/ directory.
|
|
|
|
WorldWideWeb, CERN's NeXT Browser-Editor
|
|
A browser/editor for NeXTStep. Currently out of date; editor
|
|
not operational. Allows wysiwyg hypertext editing. Requires
|
|
NeXTStep 3.0. Available for anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch in
|
|
the directory /pub/www/src.
|
|
|
|
4.3.6: X/DECWINDOWS (GRAPHICAL UNIX, VMS) BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
NCSA Mosaic for X
|
|
Unix browser using X11/Motif. The original multimedia browser.
|
|
Full http 1.0 support including PUT-method forms, image maps,
|
|
etc. Recent beta versions have limited support for tables.
|
|
Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the
|
|
directory Mosaic.
|
|
|
|
NCSA Mosaic for VMS
|
|
Browser using X11/DecWindows/Motif. For the VMS operating
|
|
system. Full http 1.0 support including PUT-method forms, image
|
|
maps, etc. Probably the best browser available for VMS.
|
|
Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the
|
|
directory Mosaic.
|
|
|
|
Netscape
|
|
From Mosaic Communications Corp (URL is:
|
|
http://home.mcom.com/info/index.html ). Downloads and displays
|
|
images incrementally while you read pages, which also display
|
|
incrementally, making it the best browser at the time of this
|
|
writing for those who connect to the web via modems. Also
|
|
supports many extensions to HTML, although not all conform to
|
|
the proposed standard. Netscape is a commercial product but is
|
|
free for personal use by individuals. Version 0.9 (available to
|
|
the public as of this writing) does not support printing, but
|
|
this is promised in the forthcoming version 1.0. Contrary to
|
|
popular myth, version 1.0 will be free for personal use, just
|
|
like version 0.9. Available by anonymous FTP from the
|
|
following sites (use the mirror closest to you; see the URL
|
|
above for the latest list):
|
|
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.mcom.com/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.uu.net/networking/info-service/www/mcc/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/net/infosys/Mosaic_Comm/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.icsi.net/pub/packages/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.sandia.gov/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://lark.cc.ukans.edu/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://www.jsc.nasa.gov/pub/netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://ftp.meer.net/pub/Netscape/
|
|
+ ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/Netscape/
|
|
|
|
Quadralay GWHIS Viewer (Commercial Mosaic)
|
|
Quadralay offers a commercial-grade (not free!) version of
|
|
Mosaic for Unix systems, with Windows and Macintosh versions
|
|
expected in the future. (URL is:
|
|
http://www.quadralay.com/products/products.html#gwhis )
|
|
|
|
tkWWW Browser/Editor for X11
|
|
Unix Browser/Editor for X11. (Beta test version.) Available for
|
|
anonymous ftp from harbor.ecn.purdue.edu in the directory
|
|
tkwww[extension] (followed by an extension possibly dependent
|
|
on the current version). Please ftp to the site and look for
|
|
the latest version (or use the link above). Supports WSYIWYG
|
|
HTML editing.
|
|
|
|
MidasWWW Browser
|
|
A Unix/X browser from Tony Johnson. (Beta, works well.)
|
|
|
|
Viola for X (Beta)
|
|
Viola has two versions for Unix/X: one using Motif, one using
|
|
Xlib (no Motif). Handles HTML Level 3 forms and tables. Has
|
|
extensions for multiple columning, collapsible/expandable list,
|
|
client-side document include. Available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ora.com in /pub/www/viola. More information available at the
|
|
URL http://xcf.berkeley.edu/ht/projects/viola/README.
|
|
|
|
Chimera
|
|
Unix/X Browser using Athena (doesn't require Motif). Supports
|
|
forms, inline images, etc.; closest to Mosaic in feel of the
|
|
non-Motif X11 browsers. Available for anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.cs.unlv.edu in the directory /pub/chimera.
|
|
|
|
Emacs w3 mode
|
|
The Emacs w3 mode supports multiple fonts, color, inline
|
|
images, movies, and the whole nine yards when run under a
|
|
graphical version of emacs; see section 4.3.7.
|
|
|
|
Arena Arena's primary purpose is to be a testbed for HTML Level 3
|
|
documents. As a result, Arena supports many of the new and
|
|
interesting features of HTML Level 3. As of this writing it is
|
|
still in prerelease and expectations should be set accordingly!
|
|
Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.w3.org in the directory
|
|
pub/www/arena/ .
|
|
|
|
4.3.7: Text-mode Unix and VMS browsers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
These are text-based browsers for Unix (and in some cases also VMS)
|
|
systems. In many cases your system administrator will have already
|
|
installed one or more of these packages; check before compiling your
|
|
own copy.
|
|
|
|
Line Mode Browser
|
|
This program gives W3 readership to anyone with a dumb
|
|
terminal. A general purpose information retrieval tool.
|
|
Available by anonymous ftp from info.cern.ch in the directory
|
|
/pub/www/src.
|
|
|
|
The "Lynx" full screen browser
|
|
This is a hypertext browser for vt100s using full screen, arrow
|
|
keys, highlighting, etc. Available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp2.cc.ukans.edu.
|
|
|
|
Tom Fine's perlWWW
|
|
A tty-based browser written in perl. Available by anonymous FTP
|
|
from archive.cis.ohio-state.edu in the directory pub/w3browser
|
|
as the file w3browser-0.1.shar.
|
|
|
|
For VMS
|
|
Dudu Rashty's full screen client based on VMS's SMG screen
|
|
management routines. Available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
vms.huji.ac.il in the directory www/www_client.
|
|
|
|
Emacs w3-mode
|
|
A WWW browser for emacs. Runs under Xwindows, NeXTstep, VMS,
|
|
OS/2, Windows NT, Windows 3.1, AmigaDOS, or just about any Unix
|
|
system. Also has fonts, color, inline images, and mouse support
|
|
if using Lemacs, Epoch, or Emacs 19. Also works in local mode
|
|
under DOS and on the Macintosh. Available by anonymous ftp from
|
|
ftp.cs.indiana.edu in the directory pub/elisp/w3.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3.8: VM/CMS BROWSERS
|
|
|
|
Albert
|
|
A WWW browser for the VM/CMS operating system. Available by
|
|
anonymous FTP from gopher.ufl.edu in the directory pub/vm/www/.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3.9: BATCH-MODE "BROWSERS"
|
|
|
|
Batch mode browser
|
|
A batch-mode "browser", url_get, which is available through the
|
|
URL http://www.utexas.edu/~zippy/url_get.html . It can be
|
|
retrieved via anonymous FTP to ftp.cc.utexas.edu, as the file
|
|
/pub/zippy/url_get.tar.Z. This package is intended for use in
|
|
cron jobs and other settings in which fetching a page in a
|
|
command-line fashion is useful.
|
|
|
|
4.4: How can I access the web through a firewall?
|
|
|
|
A "proxy server" is a specialized HTTP server which (typically) runs
|
|
on a firewall machine, providing access to the outside world for
|
|
people inside the firewall. The CERN httpd can be configured to run as
|
|
a proxy. Furthermore, it is able to perform caching of documents,
|
|
resulting in faster response times.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you cannot arrange to run a proxy server (definitely the
|
|
recommended approach), read on:
|
|
|
|
For information on using NCSA Mosaic from behind a firewall, please
|
|
read the following. In general, browsers can be made useful behind
|
|
firewalls through the use of a package called "SOCKS"; the source must
|
|
be modified slightly and rebuilt to accommodate this. Whenever
|
|
possible, work with your network administrators to solve the
|
|
problem, not against them.
|
|
|
|
An excerpt from the NCSA Mosaic FAQ:
|
|
|
|
NCSA Mosaic requires a direct internet connection to work, but some
|
|
folks have put together a package that works behind firewalls. This is
|
|
completely unsupported by NCSA, but here is the latest announcement:
|
|
|
|
November 15, 1993: C&C Software Technology Center (CSTC) of NEC
|
|
Systems Lab has made available a version of SOCKS, a package for
|
|
running Internet clients from behind firewalls without breaching
|
|
security requirements, that includes a suitably modified version of
|
|
Mosaic for X 2.0. Beware: such a version is not supported by NCSA;
|
|
we can't help with questions or problems arising from the
|
|
modifications made by others. But, we encourage you to check it
|
|
out if it's interesting to you. Questions and problem notifications
|
|
can be sent to Ying-Da Lee (ylee@syl.dl.nec.com).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.5: What is on the web?
|
|
|
|
Currently accessible through the web:
|
|
* anything served through gopher
|
|
* anything served through WAIS
|
|
* anything on an FTP site
|
|
* anything on Usenet
|
|
* anything accessible through telnet
|
|
* anything in hytelnet
|
|
* anything in hyper-g
|
|
* anything in techinfo
|
|
* anything in texinfo
|
|
* anything in the form of man pages
|
|
* sundry hypertext documents
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.5.1: HOW DO I FIND OUT WHAT'S NEW ON THE WEB?
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www.announce
|
|
The newsgroup comp.infosystems.www.announce carries
|
|
announcements of new resources on the World Wide Web. Since
|
|
newsgroups are distributed, it can be accessed reliably even
|
|
when the net is very busy.
|
|
|
|
What's New With NCSA Mosaic
|
|
The unofficial newspaper of the World Wide Web is What's New
|
|
With NCSA Mosaic (URL is
|
|
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/whats-new.html )
|
|
, which carries announcements of new servers on the web and
|
|
also of new web-related tools. This should be in your hot list
|
|
if you're not using Mosaic (which can access it directly
|
|
through the help menu).
|
|
|
|
comp.internet.net-happinings
|
|
You can also check out the newsgroup
|
|
comp.internet.net-happenings, which carries WWW announcements
|
|
and many other Internet-related announcements.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.5.2: WHERE IS THE SUBJECT CATALOG OF THE WEB?
|
|
|
|
There are several. There is no mechanism inherent in the web which
|
|
forces the creation of a single catalog (although there is work
|
|
underway on automatic mechanisms to catalog web sites). The best-known
|
|
catalog, and the first, is The WWW Virtual Library (URL is
|
|
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/DataSources/bySubject/Overview.html ),
|
|
maintained by CERN. The Virtual Library is a good place to find
|
|
resources on a particular subject, and has separate maintainers for
|
|
many subject areas.
|
|
|
|
There is also a newer cataloging system called ALIWEB that requires
|
|
very little effort to maintain and is growing rapidly (URL is
|
|
http://web.nexor.co.uk/aliweb/doc/aliweb.html ).
|
|
|
|
4.5.3: HOW CAN I SEARCH THROUGH ALL WEB SITES?
|
|
|
|
Several people have written robots which create indexes of web sites
|
|
-- including sites which have not arranged to be mentioned in the
|
|
newspapers and catalogs above. (Before writing your own robot, please
|
|
read the section on robots.)
|
|
|
|
Here are a few such automatic indexes you can search:
|
|
* WebCrawler (URL is
|
|
http://webcrawler.cs.washington.edu/WebCrawler/WebQuery.html )
|
|
builds an impressively complete index; on the other hand, since it
|
|
indexes the content of documents, it may find many links that
|
|
aren't exactly what you had in mind. However, it does a good job
|
|
of sorting the documents it finds according to how closely they
|
|
match your search.
|
|
* World Wide Web Worm (URL is
|
|
http://www.cs.colorado.edu/home/mcbryan/WWWW.html ) builds its
|
|
index based on page titles and URL contents only. This is somewhat
|
|
less inclusive, but pages it finds are more likely to be an exact
|
|
match with your needs.
|
|
* Lycos (URL is http://fuzine.mt.cs.cmu.edu/mlm/lycos-home.html ) is
|
|
another web-indexing robot, which includes the ability to submit
|
|
the URLs of your own documents by hand, ensuring that they are
|
|
available for searching.
|
|
|
|
You can read about other robots in the robots section.
|
|
|
|
4.6: How can I save an inline image to disk?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Here are two ways:
|
|
|
|
1. Turn on "load to local disk" in your browser, if it has such an
|
|
option; then reload images. You'll be prompted for filenames instead
|
|
of seeing them on the screen. Be sure to shut it off when you're done
|
|
with it.
|
|
|
|
2. Choose "view source" and browse through the HTML source; find the
|
|
URL for the inline image of interest to you; copy and paste it into
|
|
the "Open URL" window. This should load it into your image viewer
|
|
instead, where you can save it and otherwise muck about with it.
|
|
|
|
4.7: How can I get sound from the PC speaker with WinMosaic?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This piece of wisdom donated by Hunter Monroe:
|
|
|
|
This section explains how to install sound on a PC which already has a
|
|
working version of Mosaic for Microsoft Windows. Be warned in advance
|
|
that the results may be poor.
|
|
|
|
To get Mosaic to produce sound out of the PC speaker, first, you need
|
|
a driver for the speaker. You can get the Microsoft speaker driver
|
|
from the URL ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/SPEAK.EXE or by
|
|
doing an Archie search to find it somewhere else. SPEAK.EXE is a
|
|
self-extracting file. Copy the speak.exe file to a new directory, and
|
|
then type "SPEAK" at the DOS prompt. Do not put the file SPEAKER.DRV
|
|
in a separate directory from OEMSETUP.INF.
|
|
|
|
Now, you need to install the driver. In Windows, from the Program
|
|
Manager choose successively Main/Control Panel/Drivers/Add/Unlisted or
|
|
updated drivers/(enter path of SPEAK.EXE)/PC Speaker. At this point
|
|
some strange sounds come out as the driver is initialized. Change the
|
|
settings to improve the sound quality on the various sounds: tada,
|
|
chimes, etc. Click OK when you are finished and choose the Restart
|
|
windows option.
|
|
|
|
Having installed the speaker driver, you will now get sounds whenever
|
|
you start Windows, make a mistake, or exit Windows. If you do not want
|
|
this, from the Main/Control Panel/Sounds menu, make sure there is no X
|
|
next to "Enable System Sounds."
|
|
|
|
Now, you need a sound viewer program that Mosaic can call to display
|
|
sounds. NCSA unfortunately recommend WHAM, which does not work well
|
|
with a PC speaker. Get the program WPLANY instead. You can find a copy
|
|
nearby with an Archie search on the string "wplny"; the current
|
|
version is WPLNY09B.ZIP. For details on archie and other basic issues
|
|
related to FTP, please read the Usenet newsgroup
|
|
news.announce.newusers.
|
|
|
|
Move the zip file to a new directory, and use an unzip program like
|
|
pkunzip to unzip it, producing the files WPLANY.EXE and WPLANY.DOC.
|
|
Then edit the MOSAIC.INI file to remove the "REM" before the line
|
|
"TYPE9=audio/basic". Then, you need lines in the section below that
|
|
read something like: audio/basic="c:\wplany\wplany.exe %ls"
|
|
audio/wav="c:\wplany\wplany.exe %ls" where you have filled in the
|
|
correct path for wplany.exe. The MOSAIC.INI file delivered with Mosaic
|
|
may have NOTEPAD.EXE on the audio/basic line, but this will not work.
|
|
Now, restart Mosaic, and you should now be able to produce sounds. To
|
|
check this, with Mosaic choose File/Local File/\WINDOWS\*.WAV and then
|
|
try to play TADA.WAV. Then, you might try the Mosaic Demo document for
|
|
some .AU sounds, but you are lucky if your speaker produces something
|
|
you can understand.
|
|
|
|
4.8: I have a Windows PC or Macintosh. Why can't I access WAIS URLs?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This answer provided by Michael Grady (m-grady@uiuc.edu):
|
|
|
|
The version of Mosaic for X has "wais client" code built-in to it.
|
|
This was relatively easy for the developers to do, because there was
|
|
already a set of library routines for talking to WAIS available for
|
|
Unix as "public domain" (freeWAIS). I don't think there is such a
|
|
library of routines for PC/Windows or Mac, which would make it much
|
|
more difficult for the Mosaic versions for Windows and the Mac to add
|
|
"wais client" capability. Therefore, at least for now, neither the
|
|
Windows or Mac versions of Mosaic support direct query of a WAIS
|
|
server (i.e. can act as wais clients themselves).
|
|
|
|
4.9: I'm running XMosaic. Why can't I get external viewers working...
|
|
|
|
... No matter what no matter what I do to my .mailcap and .mime.types
|
|
files?
|
|
|
|
Answer provided by Ronald E. Daniel (rdaniel@acl.lanl.gov):
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mosaic only looks at the .mime.types file if it has no idea what the
|
|
document's type is. This is actually a very rare situation.
|
|
Essentially all servers now use the HTTP/1.0 protocol, which means
|
|
that they tell Mosaic (or other browsers) what the document's MIME
|
|
Content-type is. The servers use a file very much like Mosaic's
|
|
.mime.types file to infer the Content-type from the filename's
|
|
extension.
|
|
|
|
It is pretty simple to find out if this really is the problem. Use
|
|
telnet to talk to the server and find out if it is assigning a MIME
|
|
type to the document in question. Here's an example, looking at the
|
|
home page for my server. (idaknow: is my shell prompt)
|
|
|
|
idaknow: telnet www.acl.lanl.gov 80 // Connect to the httpd server
|
|
Trying 128.165.148.3 ...
|
|
Connected to www.acl.lanl.gov.
|
|
Escape character is '^]'.
|
|
HEAD /Home.html HTTP/1.0 // replace Home.html with your
|
|
documen
|
|
t
|
|
// you supply the blank line
|
|
HTTP/1.0 200 OK // the rest of this comes from the
|
|
serve
|
|
r Date: Wednesday, 25-May-94 19:18:11 GMT
|
|
Server: NCSA/1.1
|
|
MIME-version: 1.0
|
|
Content-type: text/html // Here's the MIME Content-type
|
|
Last-modified: Monday, 16-May-94 16:21:58 GMT
|
|
Content-length: 1727
|
|
|
|
Connection closed by foreign host.
|
|
idaknow:
|
|
|
|
In the example above, /Home.html will get
|
|
http://www.acl.lanl.gov/Home.html .
|
|
|
|
Normally servers will be configured to supply a Content-type of
|
|
text/plain if they don't know what else to do. If this is the
|
|
problem you are having, take a look at the TypesConfig documentation
|
|
for NCSA's httpd. You can have the server look at the filename
|
|
extension, supply the correct Content-type, then use your local
|
|
.mailcap file to tell Mosaic what viewer to use to look at the
|
|
document.
|
|
|
|
Russ Segal adds:
|
|
|
|
The answer from Ronald Daniel is essentially correct, but it needs a
|
|
small addendum.
|
|
|
|
When starting Moasic, you can specify a "fileProxy" which will fetch
|
|
files for you:
|
|
|
|
"*fileProxy: http://socks/"
|
|
|
|
If you do this, file: URLs are no longer strictly local accesses. So
|
|
even if the URL is not fttp:, the proxy server must be upgraded as
|
|
Mr. Daniel suggests.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.10: Hey, I know, I'll write a WWW-exploring robot! Why not?
|
|
|
|
Programs that automatically traverse the web can be quite useful, but
|
|
have the potential to make a serious mess of things. Robots have been
|
|
written which do a "breadth-first" search of the web, exploring many
|
|
sites in a gradual fashion instead of aggressively "rooting out" the
|
|
pages of one site at a time. Some of these robots now produce
|
|
excellent indexes of information available on the web.
|
|
|
|
But others have written simple depth-first searches which, at the
|
|
worst, can bring servers to their knees in minutes by recursively
|
|
downloading information from CGI script-based pages that contain an
|
|
infinite number of possible links. (Often robots can't realize this!)
|
|
Imagine what happens when a robot decides to "index" the CONTENTS of
|
|
several hundred mpeg movies. Shudder.
|
|
|
|
The moral: a robot that does what you want may already exist; if it
|
|
doesn't, please study the document World Wide Web Robots, Wanderers
|
|
and Spiders (URL is: http://web.nexor.co.uk/mak/doc/robots/robots.html
|
|
) and learn about the emerging standards for exclusion of robots from
|
|
areas in which they are not wanted. You can also read about existing
|
|
robots there.
|
|
|
|
4.11: How do I send newsgroup posts in HTML to my web client?
|
|
|
|
How to do this depends greatly on your system; if you have a Mac or
|
|
Windows system, the answer is completely different. But, as food for
|
|
thought, here is a simple shell script I use on my Unix account to
|
|
send posts from rn and related newsreaders to Lynx. Put this text in
|
|
the file "readwebpost" and use the "chmod" command to make it
|
|
executable, then put it somewhere in your path (such as your personal
|
|
bin directory):
|
|
|
|
#!/bin/sh
|
|
echo \<PRE\> > .article.html
|
|
cat >> .article.html
|
|
echo \</PRE\> >> .article.html
|
|
lynx .article.html < /dev/tty
|
|
rm .article.html
|
|
|
|
Then add the following line to your .rnmac file (create it if you
|
|
don't already have one):
|
|
|
|
W |readwebpost %C
|
|
|
|
Now, when you press "W" while reading a post in rn, a message will be
|
|
sent to Lynx, and the links enclosed in it will be live.
|
|
|
|
Larry W. Virden provides the following version which invokes Mosaic
|
|
instead, and is also capable of communicating with an already-running
|
|
copy of Mosaic instead of launching another. (You can use the same rn
|
|
macro as above, invoking "goto-xm" instead of "readwebpost".) Read the
|
|
comments for details on the assumptions made by the script.
|
|
|
|
#! /bin/sh
|
|
# goto-xm, by Joseph T. Buck <jbuck@eecs.berkeley.edu>
|
|
# Modified heavily by Larry W. Virden <lvirden@cas.org>
|
|
# Script for use with newsreaders such as trn. Piping the article
|
|
# through this command causes xmosaic to pop up, pointing to the
|
|
# article. If an existing xmosaic (version 1.1 or later) exists,
|
|
# the USR1 method will be used to cause it to point to the correct
|
|
# article, otherwise a new one will be started.
|
|
|
|
# assumptions: ps command works as is on SunOS 4.1.x, may need changes
|
|
# on other platforms.
|
|
|
|
URL=`/bin/grep '^Message-ID:' | /bin/sed -e 's/.*</news:/' -e 's/>.*//'`
|
|
if [ "X$URL" = "X" ]; then
|
|
echo "USAGE: $0 [goto] [once] < USENET_msg" >&2
|
|
exit 1
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
pid=`ps -xc | egrep '[Mm]osaic' | awk 'NR == 1 {print $1}'`
|
|
p=`which Mosaic`
|
|
gfile=/tmp/Mosaic.$pid
|
|
|
|
$p "$URL" &
|
|
|
|
if [ "$#" -gt 0 ] ; then
|
|
if [ "$1" = "goto" -o "$1" = "same" ] ; then
|
|
shift
|
|
echo "goto" > $gfile
|
|
else
|
|
echo "newwin" > $gfile
|
|
fi
|
|
else
|
|
echo "newwin" > $gfile
|
|
fi
|
|
/bin/awk 'END { printf "'"$URL"'" }' </dev/null >> $gfile
|
|
|
|
trap "echo signal encountered" 30
|
|
kill -USR1 $pid
|
|
|
|
exit 0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
See also MosaicMail (URL is
|
|
http://www.oac.uci.edu/indiv/ehood/mhonarc.doc.html ), a Perl script
|
|
which pipes email and/or news to your current Mosaic session.
|
|
|
|
4.12: I can't get SLIP. I want Mosaic. Is there a way?
|
|
|
|
YES! If you have a plain old Unix shell account on a Unix system, such
|
|
as a SunOS or Ultrix system, you can do one of two things: you can run
|
|
SlipKnot, a special browser which operates using programs that may
|
|
already be installed on your shell account (see section 4.3.1), or you
|
|
can run The Internet Adapter (TIA), a program which provides a
|
|
pseudo-SLIP connection. The remainder of this section focuses on TIA.
|
|
|
|
TIA is not free software, but there is a free two-week trial period
|
|
and it is very cheap to register.
|
|
|
|
"So what do I run on my machine at home?"
|
|
|
|
Exactly the same software you would use for real SLIP; as far as your
|
|
PC is concerned, it is a SLIP connection. If you're unfamiliar with
|
|
SLIP please check out a newsgroup relevant to your particular type of
|
|
PC (Windows, Mac, etc). (This isn't restricted to common systems;
|
|
because all the emulation happens on your Unix shell account, your
|
|
client machine can run anything that supports SLIP.)
|
|
|
|
"Details, please! I'm confused."
|
|
|
|
Check out the TIA home page (URL is
|
|
http://marketplace.com/tia/tiahome.html ), or send email to
|
|
info@marketplace.com and request details about TIA.
|
|
|
|
If you have a Macintosh, check out the Macintosh TIA Users' FAQ (URL
|
|
is: ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/bi/billa/tia/faq.html ) for additional
|
|
help.
|
|
Archive-name: www/faq/part2
|
|
Last-modified: 1995/26/1
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.1: HOW CAN I PROVIDE INFORMATION TO THE WEB?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Information providers run programs that the browsers can obtain
|
|
hypertext from. These programs can either be WWW servers that
|
|
understand the HyperText Transfer Protocol HTTP (best if you are
|
|
creating your information database from scratch), "gateway" programs
|
|
that convert an existing information format to hypertext, or a
|
|
non-HTTP server that WWW browsers can access -- anonymous FTP or
|
|
gopher, for example.
|
|
|
|
To learn more about World Wide Web servers, you can consult a www
|
|
server primer by Nathan Torkington, available at the URL
|
|
http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-servers.html .
|
|
|
|
If you only want to provide information to local users, placing your
|
|
information in local files is also an option. This means, however,
|
|
that there can be no off-machine access.
|
|
|
|
5.2: Obtaining Servers
|
|
|
|
Servers are available for Unix, Macintosh, MS Windows, Windows NT,
|
|
OS/2, and VMS systems. If you know of a server for another operating
|
|
system, please contact me.
|
|
|
|
See http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/Overview.html for more
|
|
information on writing servers and gateways in general.
|
|
|
|
5.2.1: UNIX SERVERS
|
|
|
|
NCSA httpd
|
|
NCSA has released a server, known as the NCSA httpd; it is
|
|
available at the URL ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/ncsa_httpd .
|
|
|
|
EIT httpd
|
|
EIT has created the Webmaster's Starter Kit, which installs
|
|
their WWW server on your system via the web through a painless
|
|
forms interface. Recommended for those unfamiliar with server
|
|
installation. You can learn more about the starter kit and the
|
|
EIT httpd at the starter kit site (URL is
|
|
http://wsk.eit.com/wsk/doc/ ).
|
|
|
|
CERN httpd
|
|
CERN's server is available for anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch
|
|
(URL is http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/Status.html )
|
|
and many other places. Use your local copy of archie to search
|
|
for "www" in order to find a nearby site.
|
|
|
|
GN Gopher/HTTP server
|
|
The GN server is unique in that it can serve both WWW and
|
|
Gopher clients (in their native modes). This is a good server
|
|
for those migrating from Gopher to WWW, although it does not
|
|
have the server-side-script capabilities of the NCSA and CERN
|
|
servers. See the URL http://hopf.math.nwu.edu/ .
|
|
|
|
Perl server
|
|
There is also a server written in the Perl scripting language,
|
|
called Plexus, for which documentation is available at the URL
|
|
http://bsdi.com/server/doc/plexus.html .
|
|
|
|
WN Server
|
|
The WN Server, available at the URL
|
|
http://hopf.math.nwu.edu/docs/manual.html , is designed with an
|
|
emphasis on security and flexibility, and takes a different
|
|
approach from the NCSA and CERN servers. It provides text
|
|
searching facilities as a standard feature.
|
|
|
|
5.2.2: MACINTOSH SERVERS
|
|
|
|
There is a server for the Macintosh, MacHTTP, available at the URL
|
|
http://www.uth.tmc.edu/mac_info/machttp_info.html .
|
|
|
|
5.2.3: MS WINDOWS, IBM OS/2 AND MS WINDOWS NT SERVERS
|
|
|
|
HTTPS (Windows NT)
|
|
HTTPS is a server for Windows NT systems, both Intel and Alpha
|
|
-- based. It is available via anonymous FTP from emwac.ed.ac.uk
|
|
in the directory pub/https (URL is
|
|
ftp://emwac.ed.ac.uk/pub/https). (Be sure to download the
|
|
version appropriate to your processor.) You can read a detailed
|
|
announcement at the FTP site, or by using the URL
|
|
ftp://emwac.ed.ac.uk/pub/https/https.txt.
|
|
|
|
A professional version is also available (URL is
|
|
http://emwac.ed.ac.uk/html/internet_toolchest/https/prof.htm ).
|
|
|
|
NCSA httpd for Windows
|
|
The NCSA httpd for Windows has most of the features of the Unix
|
|
version, including scripts (which generate pages on the fly
|
|
based on user input). It is available by anonymous FTP from the
|
|
ftp site ftp.alisa.com in the directory pub/win-httpd, and
|
|
documentation can be found at the URL
|
|
http://www.alisa.com/win-httpd/index.html .
|
|
|
|
SerWeb
|
|
A simple, effective server for Windows writtten by Gustavo
|
|
Estrella. Available by anonymous ftp from
|
|
winftp.cica.indiana.edu (or one of its mirror sites, such as
|
|
nic.switch.ch), as the file serweb03.zip, in the directory
|
|
/pub/pc/win3/winsock.
|
|
|
|
There is also a Windows NT version of SerWeb, available by
|
|
anonymous FTP from emwac.ed.ac.uk as /pub/serweb/serweb_i.zip.
|
|
|
|
WEB4HAM
|
|
Another Windows-based server, available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de as /pub/net/winsock/web4ham.zip.
|
|
|
|
OS2HTTPD
|
|
An OS/2 server, written by Frankie Fan. See the home page (URL
|
|
is ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/kf/kfan/overview.html ) for
|
|
details, or fetch the package by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.netcom.com in the directory pub/kf/kfan.
|
|
|
|
5.2.4: MSDOS AND NOVELL NETWARE SERVERS
|
|
|
|
KA9Q KA9Q NOS (nos11c.exe) is a internet server package for DOS that
|
|
includes HTTP and Gopher servers. It can be obtained via
|
|
anonymous FTP from one of the following sites:
|
|
|
|
|
|
inorganic5.chem.ufl.edu
|
|
biochemistry.cwru.edu
|
|
|
|
GLACI-HTTPD
|
|
GLACI-HTTPD is a Netware Loadable Module which allows a Novell
|
|
NetWare server to become a World Wide Web server (URL is
|
|
http://www.glaci.com/info/glaci-httpd.html ).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.2.5: VMS SERVERS
|
|
|
|
CERN HTTP for VMS
|
|
A port of the CERN server to VMS. Available at the URL
|
|
http://delonline.cern.ch/disk$user/duns/doc/vms/distribution.html .
|
|
|
|
Region 6 Threaded HTTP Server
|
|
A native VMS server which uses DECthreads(tm). This is a
|
|
potentially major performance advantage because VMS has a high
|
|
overhead for each process, which is a problem for the
|
|
frequently-forking NCSA and CERN servers that began life under
|
|
Unix. A multithreaded server avoids this overhead. Available at
|
|
the URL http://kcgl1.eng.ohio-state.edu/www/doc/serverinfo.html .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.2.6: AMIGA SERVERS
|
|
|
|
NCSA's Unix server has been ported to the Amiga, and is bundled with
|
|
the AMosaic browser. See the URL
|
|
http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/AMosaic/home.html for details.
|
|
|
|
5.2.7: VM/CMS SERVERS
|
|
|
|
A VM/CMS web server is available; see the URL
|
|
http://ua1vm.ua.edu/~troth/rickvmsw/rickvmsw.html for more
|
|
information. If you don't yet have a web browser to try this URL with,
|
|
check out the VM/CMS Browsers section.
|
|
|
|
5.2.8: YEAH, BUT WHICH IS BEST?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To find out which server is best for your needs, you will want to
|
|
consult Paul Hoffman's Server Comparison Chart (URL is
|
|
http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/faq/chart.html ). That document is also
|
|
available by anonymous FTP from ftp.netcom.com in the directory
|
|
pub/bo/boutell/faq.
|
|
|
|
5.3: Producing HTML documents
|
|
|
|
HTML is the simple markup system used to create hypertext documents.
|
|
There are three ways to produce HTML documents: writing them yourself,
|
|
which is not a very difficult skill to acquire, using an HTML editor,
|
|
which assists in doing the above, and converting documents in other
|
|
formats to HTML. The following three sections cover these
|
|
possibilities in sequence.
|
|
|
|
5.3.1: WRITING HTML DOCUMENTS YOURSELF
|
|
|
|
You can write an HTML document with any text editor. Try the "source"
|
|
button of your browser (or "save as" HTML) to look at the HTML for a
|
|
page you find particularly interesting. The odds are that it will be a
|
|
great deal simpler than you would expect. If you're used to marking up
|
|
text in any way (even red-pencilling it), HTML should be rather
|
|
intuitive.
|
|
|
|
A beginner's guide to HTML is available at the URL
|
|
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimer.html . You
|
|
can also find a plain text version (at the URL
|
|
ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.txt) and a compressed
|
|
Postscript version (at the URL
|
|
ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.ps.Z). (Since the
|
|
latter two are FTP URLs, you can fetch them by hand using FTP if you
|
|
do not yet have a web browser.)
|
|
|
|
There is also an HTML primer by Nathan Torkington at the URL
|
|
http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-html.html .
|
|
|
|
5.3.2: HTML EDITORS
|
|
|
|
Of course, most folks would still prefer to use a friendlier,
|
|
graphical editor. Some editors are WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You
|
|
Get), or close to it; others simply assist you in writing HTML by
|
|
plugging in the desired markup tags for you from a menu.
|
|
|
|
Fans of the EMACS editor can use EMACS and html-helper-mode , an EMACS
|
|
"mode" for HTML editing (URL is http://www.reed.edu/~nelson/tools/ ).
|
|
|
|
There is also another Emacs HTML mode, html-mode.el (URL is
|
|
ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/html/elisp/html-mode.el ).
|
|
|
|
For Microsoft Windows users, there is an editor called HTML Assistant
|
|
with features to assist in the creation of HTML documents. It can be
|
|
had by anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.dal.ca in the directory /htmlasst/.
|
|
Read the README.1ST file in this directory for information on which
|
|
files to download.
|
|
|
|
ANT_HTML.DOT is a Word for Windows 6.0 template designed to convert
|
|
Word documents into HTML documents in a WYSIWYG environment. It
|
|
includes a demo version of the ANT_PLUS utility, which converts HTML
|
|
files to WYSIWYG. ANT_PLUS also converts HTML files to ASCII, RTF, or
|
|
any other format possible in Word 6.0. Contact jswift@freenet.fsu.edu
|
|
if you need more information.
|
|
|
|
A WYSIWYG editor for the Web, SoftQuad HoTMetaL, is available for
|
|
downloading at NCSA and numerous other sites. Many mirror sites exist;
|
|
if you can't get through to one, try another, don't give up! That's
|
|
what mirror sites are for. (Also be sure to use the copy closest to
|
|
you geographically if possible.) Hotmetal is available for both Sun
|
|
Sparc systems and Windows systems; note that Windows users need at
|
|
least 6 megabytes of free memory. (A 2-megabyte swap file should just
|
|
barely do the trick on a 4MB machine.)
|
|
|
|
Known mirrors:
|
|
* ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/html/hotmetal/
|
|
* ftp://ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/SGML/HoTMetaL
|
|
* ftp://sgml1.ex.ac.uk/SoftQuad
|
|
* ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/WWW/ncsa/html/hotmetal/
|
|
*
|
|
ftp://askhp.ask.uni-karlsruhe.de/pub/infosystems/mosaic/contrib/Sof
|
|
tQuad
|
|
* ftp://ftp.cs.concordia.ca/pub/www
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
You need a Sun SPARC or Microsoft Windows system and 6MB of disk (6MB
|
|
of RAM minimum for MS Windows; swap files count). Other Unix systems
|
|
may be supported by the time you read this; have a look on one of the
|
|
sites above.
|
|
|
|
Because it is context-sensitive, HoTMetaL guides users in creating new
|
|
HTML documents and in cleaning up old ones. A Publish command changes
|
|
appropriate SRC and HREF attributes from local paths to http
|
|
locations. For more information, FTP the README file from the same
|
|
directory, or send email to hotmetal@sq.com. A HoTMetaL Pro
|
|
commercially supported version is available for purchase from SoftQuad
|
|
and its resellers.
|
|
|
|
Also see Gabriel White's reviews of MS Windows HTML editors (URL is
|
|
http://werple.mira.net.au/%7Egabriel/web/html/editors/ ). Another
|
|
option, if you have an SGML editor, is to use it with the HTML DTD
|
|
(URL is http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/DTDHeading.html ).
|
|
|
|
An editor for all X users: TkWWW (listed above under X browsers)
|
|
supports WYSIWYG HTML editing; and since it's a browser, you can try
|
|
out links immediately after creating them.
|
|
|
|
Another editor for X users: Phoenix (URL is
|
|
http://www.bsd.uchicago.edu/ftp/pub/phoenix/README.html ) is a fully
|
|
WYSIWYG HTML editor which insulates the user from direct control of
|
|
the HTML tags. Available by anonymous FTP from www.bsd.uchicago.edu in
|
|
the pub/phoenix subdirectory.
|
|
|
|
Also for X users, there is a package called htmltext which supports
|
|
WYSIWYG HTML editing. More information is available at the URL
|
|
http://web.cs.city.ac.uk/homes/njw/htmltext/htmltext.html .
|
|
|
|
For Macintosh users, there is a near-WYSIWYG package called HTML
|
|
Editor (URL is http://dragon.acadiau.ca:1667/~giles/HTML_Editor).
|
|
|
|
ANT_HTML is a Word for the Macintosh template designed to convert Word
|
|
documents into HTML documents in a WYSIWYG environment. It includes a
|
|
demo version of the ANT_PLUS utility, which converts HTML files to
|
|
WYSIWYG. ANT_PLUS also converts HTML files to ASCII, RTF, or any other
|
|
format possible in Word. At the time of this writing it was scheduled
|
|
to have been released on the Macintosh (it has long been available for
|
|
Windows). Contact jswift@freenet.fsu.edu for more information. Also
|
|
for Macintosh users, the BBEdit HTML extensions allow the BBEdit and
|
|
BBEdit Lite text editors for the Macintosh to conveniently edit HTML
|
|
documents. (URL is http://www.uji.es/bbedit-html-extensions.html .)
|
|
You can also obtain the extensions package by anonymous ftp from
|
|
sumex-aim.stanford.edu as info-mac/bbedit-html-ext-b3.hqx.
|
|
|
|
There is an alternative BBEdit extension package available as well
|
|
(URL is http://www.york.ac.uk/~ld11/BBEditTools.html ). it is
|
|
available by FTP from ftp.york.ac.uk in the directory
|
|
/pub/users/ld11/BBEdit_HTML_Tools.sea.hqx.
|
|
|
|
NCSA's List of Filters and Editors, for which the URL is
|
|
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/faq-software.html#ed
|
|
itors, mentions several editors, including two for MS Windows. In some
|
|
cases, the "editor" amounts to a set of macros for an existing word
|
|
processor, which can provide a near-WYSIWYG environment.
|
|
|
|
Note that this URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain
|
|
operating systems won't allow mixed case on the command line, or will
|
|
only allow it if it is quoted (VMS), so if you are launching Lynx or
|
|
another client and specifying a URL at the command line, try quoting
|
|
the URL in double-quotes ("URL").
|
|
|
|
5.3.3: CONVERTING OTHER FORMATS TO HTML
|
|
|
|
There is a collection of filters for converting your existing
|
|
documents (in TeX and other non-HTML formats) into HTML automatically,
|
|
including filters that can allow more or less WYSIWYG editing using
|
|
various word processors:
|
|
|
|
Rich Brandwein and Mike Sendall's List at CERN (URL is
|
|
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Tools/Filters.html ).
|
|
|
|
(Note that this URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain
|
|
operating systems such as VMS require you to quote mixed-case URLs
|
|
when launching a borwser from the command line. This is NOT a bug in
|
|
the browser.)
|
|
|
|
There is also a Word for Windows template for writing HTML documents,
|
|
available at the URL http://www.gatech.edu/word_html/release.htm .
|
|
|
|
5.3.4: CHECKING YOUR HTML FOR ERRORS
|
|
|
|
Tools to validate your HTML documents (check them for errors) are
|
|
available. There is a form at the URL
|
|
http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-test/service/validation-form.html
|
|
which will check HTML documents for errors according to the latest
|
|
specification; note that you are encouraged to set up the program on
|
|
your own system if you make heavy use of the form. There is also a
|
|
tool which will check the links in your documents for links to
|
|
nonexistent resources, such as pages that have moved (URL is
|
|
http://wsk.eit.com/wsk/dist/doc/admin/webtest/verify_links.html ).
|
|
|
|
Also try weblint (URL is
|
|
http://www.khoros.unm.edu/staff/neilb/weblint.html ), a Perl script
|
|
that checks your HTML for errors; you can even try it out over the web
|
|
through an HTML form. The script is available by anonymous FTP from
|
|
ftp.khoros.unm.edu in the directory pub/perl/www.
|
|
|
|
Another such tool is htmlchek (URL is:
|
|
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~churchh/htmlchek.html ), which checks HTML
|
|
documents for errors, creates a cross-reference, automatically expands
|
|
entities (such as European characters) to their proper HTML form, and
|
|
performs other useful services. htmlchek is available by anonymous FTP
|
|
from ftp.cs.buffalo.edu in the directory pub/htmlchek.
|
|
|
|
5.4: How do I publicize my work?
|
|
|
|
There are several things you can do to publicize your new HTML server
|
|
or other offering:
|
|
* Post to comp.infosystems.www.announce. PLEASE READ THE CHARTER
|
|
POSTING FIRST. In general, always read a newsgroup first to
|
|
familiarize yourself before posting to it.
|
|
* Submit it to the NCSA What's New Page at the URL
|
|
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/whats-new.html
|
|
(see the page for details on how to submit your listing!).
|
|
* Post it to the newsgroup comp.infosystems.announce. Please read
|
|
the group first to get a feel for the contents. You should not
|
|
post to comp.infosystems.www.users,.misc,.providers, etc., but if
|
|
you feel compelled to do so, please choose .misc as announcements
|
|
are of interest to both providers and users (and those who wear
|
|
both hats).
|
|
* Submit it to the maintainers of various catalogs, such as the WWW
|
|
Virtual Library (at the URL
|
|
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/DataSources/bySubject/Overview.html
|
|
) and the ALIWEB index (at the URL
|
|
http://web.nexor.co.uk/aliweb/doc/aliweb.html ).
|
|
* Read Gareth Rees' guide to publishing on the World Wide Web. (URL
|
|
is http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/gdr11/publish.html ).
|
|
|
|
5.5: Can I buy space on an existing server?
|
|
|
|
Yes, you can. A list of sites offering WWW space for lease is
|
|
available (at the URL http://union.ncsa.uiuc.edu/www/leasing.shtml ).
|
|
|
|
5.6: How fast does my net connection need to be?
|
|
|
|
The following response to this very-frequently-asked-question was
|
|
provided by Mike Meyer (mwm@contessa.phone.net).
|
|
|
|
The answer is "It depends." What it depends on is what kind of
|
|
things you want to provide on your server. Here are some rules of
|
|
thumb to use when deciding what kind of connection you need for your
|
|
server.
|
|
|
|
The first rule of thumb is:
|
|
|
|
Don't worry about simultaneous access.
|
|
|
|
Unless you have a very large site, simultaneous access is not a
|
|
problem. If you have a very large site, you need as much bandwidth
|
|
as you can afford. There is a bit more about this below.
|
|
|
|
The second rule of thumb is:
|
|
|
|
It should take at most 5 seconds to send a page.
|
|
|
|
The five second rule dates from command line days, when that was
|
|
about how long people would wait before getting impatient with the
|
|
system. It seems like a reasonable number to use now.
|
|
|
|
Since external images/audio/etc. are somewhat exceptional, allow
|
|
more time for them. If you think they should have the same
|
|
restrictions as above, buy the bandwidth your site will need to do
|
|
so. However, the rule of thumb for external images/audio/etc is:
|
|
|
|
It should take at most 30 seconds to send an external file.
|
|
|
|
Given these rules, it's pretty straightforward to work out how large
|
|
an HTML page and external files can be. At least, it's easy after
|
|
you simplify things by ignoring IP overhead on the line, compression
|
|
on modem lines, and anything that's less than 10% of the total (or
|
|
even a little bit more than 10%).
|
|
|
|
The one simplification not to ignore is the multiple packet
|
|
round-trips it takes to get data flowing through an HTTP channel.
|
|
For modem lines, this is nearly a second for each HTTP connection,
|
|
which is significant. For leased lines, it's more like .1 or .2
|
|
seconds, which is not significant.
|
|
|
|
On a 14.4 line assumed to be sending 1.4K bytes of data/second, with
|
|
a 1 second startup, you get 4 * 1.4 or 5.6K of HTML. If you want to
|
|
include a single inline image, that's 2 seconds of startup, so
|
|
you're down to 3 * 1.4 or 4.2K of HTML + image. This means smallish
|
|
HTML pages, and simple inline images. For external files, you get 29
|
|
* 1.4 or 40K, which is still a small image. If you have a 28.8 line,
|
|
you get to double those figures; for a 9600 line, figure 2/3rds of
|
|
that size.
|
|
|
|
On a 56K leased line assumed to be sending 5K/second, you get 25K of
|
|
HTML, or mixed HTML/data. For external images, it's 150K. That
|
|
should cover any reasonable HTML document, and small to medium
|
|
external files. An MPEG movie might be a bit much.
|
|
|
|
With a T1 line assumed to be sending 150K/second, you get 750K of
|
|
HTML, or 4.5 megabytes in an external file. Barring very large
|
|
animations, this should be sufficient for anything you want to
|
|
serve. More would be faster, but it also gets drastically more
|
|
expensive.
|
|
|
|
Given the above guidelines, let's look at simultaneous access again.
|
|
Under the worst case conditions, you're using all of your line for
|
|
HTML pages, each of which takes 5 seconds to send, so your server is
|
|
sending 12 pages a minute, or 720 pages an hour, or 17,000 pages a
|
|
day (pages, not accesses; each inline image in a page generates an
|
|
access, unless the client cached it). This makes you one of the
|
|
busier sites on the web. While you'll have contention problems
|
|
before you get to this point, anything but a modem connection will
|
|
be sending most pages in a small fraction of five seconds, which
|
|
should leave plenty of bandwidth with no contention. If you have
|
|
this kind of access rates on a modem line, you should seriously
|
|
consider upgrading your connection.
|
|
|
|
The bottom line on simultaneous access is that the WWW server is
|
|
more likely to have contention with other uses of the line than with
|
|
itself. Since I don't know what else you use your line for, I can't
|
|
factor it in. You'll have to consider that issue yourself.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.7.1: HOW DO I SET UP A CLICKABLE IMAGE MAP?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are really two issues here: how to indicate in HTML that you
|
|
want an image to be clickable, and how to configure your server to do
|
|
something with the clicks returned by Mosaic, Chimera, and other
|
|
clients capable of delivering them.
|
|
|
|
You can read about image maps and the NCSA server at the URL
|
|
http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs/setup/admin/Imagemap.html .
|
|
|
|
Using imagemaps requires that you create a map file; you can do this
|
|
by hand or with a WYSIWYG tool.
|
|
|
|
VERY IMPORTANT: Creating imagemaps requires a real web server (not
|
|
an FTP server) and a cooperative web server administrator. It is not
|
|
usually as simple as wrapping a link around an IMG SRC tag and adding
|
|
the ISMAP directive; the server must also be told about the map file,
|
|
and the way to accomplish this varies from server to server. So read
|
|
your server documentation, and don't waste time making maps before
|
|
making sure you have the necessary tools to deliver them.
|
|
|
|
Mapedit
|
|
Mapedit (URL is:
|
|
http://sunsite.unc.edu/boutell/mapedit/mapedit.html ) is a
|
|
WYSIWYG imagemap editing tool for Microsoft Windows and the X
|
|
Window System.
|
|
|
|
MapMaker
|
|
For users of John Bradley's xv image display software for the
|
|
X Window System, Mapmaker can turn the miniature images created
|
|
by xv's Visual Schnauzer into an imagemap. This is useful if
|
|
you would like to make an entire directory of images available
|
|
(but note that you should also make textual links to allow
|
|
those with text- based browsers to download the images for
|
|
external viewing). (URL is:
|
|
http://icg.stwing.upenn.edu:80/~mengwong/mapmaker.html )
|
|
|
|
WebMap
|
|
On the Macintosh, you may want to use WebMap (URL is
|
|
ftp://ftp.uwtc.washington.edu/pub/Mac/Network/WWW ). . It
|
|
produces both NCSA and CERN-compatible maps, which can also be
|
|
used with MacImagemap and a Macintosh-based server (MacImagemap
|
|
is found in the same directory). Alternatively, you may want to
|
|
use MacMapMaker, also available from
|
|
ftp://ftp.uwtc.washington.edu/pub/Mac/Network/WWW (the same
|
|
directory).
|
|
|
|
Tkmapedit
|
|
For Unix systems and other systems on which the Tk/Tcl language
|
|
toolkit has been installed, Tkmapedit provides a WYSIWYG
|
|
imagemap editor which is capable of directly testing links if
|
|
the tkWWW web browser is available. Available by anonymous FTP
|
|
from the TCL archive on ftp.aud.alcatel.com.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.7.2: HOW DO I MAKE A "LINK" THAT DOESN'T LOAD A NEW PAGE?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Such links are useful when a form is intended to perform some action
|
|
on the server machine without sending new information to the client,
|
|
or when a user has clicked in an undefined area in an image map; these
|
|
are just two possibilities.
|
|
|
|
Rob McCool of NCSA provided the following wisdom on the subject:
|
|
|
|
Yechezkal-Shimon Gutfreund (sg04@gte.com) wrote:
|
|
: Ok, here is another bizzare request from me:
|
|
|
|
: I am currently running scripts which I "DO NOT" want to return
|
|
: any visible result. That is, not text/plain, not text/HTML, not
|
|
: image/gif. The entire results are the side effects of the
|
|
: script and nothing should be returned to the viewer.
|
|
|
|
: It would be nice to have an internally supported null viewer
|
|
: so that I could do this, more "cleanly" (ok, ok, I hear your groans).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HTTP now supports a response code of 204, which is no operation. Some
|
|
browsers such as Mosaic/X 2.* support it. To use it, make your script
|
|
a nph script and output an HTTP/1.0 204 header. Something like:
|
|
|
|
HTTP/1.0 204 No response Server: Myscript/NCSA httpd 1.1
|
|
|
|
(You can learn more about nph scripts from the NCSA server
|
|
documentation at the URL http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs .)
|
|
Essentially they are scripts that handle their own HTTP response
|
|
codes.
|
|
|
|
5.7.3: WHERE CAN I LEARN HOW TO CREATE FILL-OUT FORMS?
|
|
|
|
Writing an HTML form is easy, but the form doesn't accomplish anything
|
|
until you write a CGI program to interpret the results on the server
|
|
side! For more information, see section 5.7.14.
|
|
|
|
See the section on email forms for a simple solution to the most
|
|
commonly desired form.
|
|
|
|
5.7.3.1: How can I create hidden fields in forms (keeping state)?
|
|
|
|
Use INPUT TYPE=hidden. An example:
|
|
|
|
<INPUT TYPE=hidden NAME=state VALUE="hidden info to be returned with form">
|
|
|
|
By now, most browsers can handle the hidden type, but understand that
|
|
some browsers will fail to hide the field (and probably confuse the
|
|
user). Note that "hidden" doesn't mean "secret"; the user can always
|
|
click on "view source".
|
|
|
|
5.7.3.2: How can users send me email through their browsers?
|
|
|
|
There are two ways:
|
|
|
|
Using a mailto: URL
|
|
You can simply create a link which looks like this:
|
|
|
|
<A HREF="mailto:me@my.address">Send Me Mail</A>
|
|
|
|
This works great for browsers that support the mailto: URL.
|
|
Perhaps 80% of web users will be able to use such a link. But
|
|
not all browsers support it.
|
|
|
|
Installing an email form
|
|
If you have access to the server's configuration files, or if
|
|
your server administrator permits users to create their own CGI
|
|
scripts, you can create a form which sends mail to you from any
|
|
browser that supports forms. I've written a simple email forms
|
|
package (URL is: http://siva.cshl.org/email/index.html ), which
|
|
does it in ANSI C. There is also a package written in Perl,
|
|
known as the WWW Mailto Gateway (URL is
|
|
http://www.mps.ohio-state.edu/mailto/mailto_info.html ).
|
|
GetComments (URL is:
|
|
http://everest.cs.ucdavis.edu/~hoagland/getcomments.html) is a
|
|
more general package, also written in Perl, which can handle
|
|
many different types of comment forms.
|
|
|
|
If you want to learn how these forms actually work, see section
|
|
5.7.14.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.7.4: HOW DO I COMMENT AN HTML DOCUMENT?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Use the <!-- tag at the beginning of EACH line commented out; close
|
|
this for EACH line with the --> tag. Note that comments do not nest,
|
|
and the sequence "--" may not appear inside a comment except as part
|
|
of the closing --> tag. (It's officially allowed, but some browsers
|
|
won't handle it properly.)
|
|
|
|
You should not try to use this to "comment out" HTML that would
|
|
otherwise be shown to the user, since some browsers (notably Mosaic)
|
|
will still pay attention to tags inside the comment and close it
|
|
prematurely.
|
|
|
|
Thanks to Joe English for clearing up this issue.
|
|
|
|
5.7.5: HOW CAN I CREATE DECENT-LOOKING TABLES AND STOP USING <PRE>...
|
|
</PRE>?
|
|
|
|
Tables are a standard feature in HTML Level 3, a new version of HTML.
|
|
Unfortunately, they are at present implemented only by the latest NCSA
|
|
Mosaic versions and the Viola and Emacs-W3 browsers, to my knowledge.
|
|
In addition, most implementations are incomplete. In some
|
|
implementations, at the time of this writing, text in tables cannot be
|
|
selected and/or cannot be a link.
|
|
|
|
However, there is a way to use HTML Level 3 tables now and convert
|
|
them automatically to HTML, allowing you to design proper tables and
|
|
install those pages directly when table support arrives in the
|
|
majority of clients. You can do this using the html+tables package, by
|
|
Brooks Cutter (bcutter@paradyne.com), which is available for anonymous
|
|
ftp from sunsite.unc.edu in the directory
|
|
pub/packages/infosystems/WWW/tools/html+tables.shar. This package
|
|
requires the shell language Perl, which is primarily used on Unix
|
|
systems but is also available for other systems (such as MSDOS
|
|
machines). html+tables accepts HTML Level 3 and outputs html using the
|
|
<PRE>...</PRE> construct to represent tables, allowing you to write
|
|
HTML Level 3 now, knowing that it will look better when clients are
|
|
ready for it.
|
|
|
|
5.7.6: WHAT IS HTML LEVEL 3 AND WHERE CAN I LEARN MORE ABOUT IT?
|
|
|
|
HTML Level 3, also known as HTML+, is an enhanced version of HTML
|
|
designed to address some of the limitations of HTML. HTML Level 3
|
|
supports true tables, right-justified text, centered text, line breaks
|
|
that do not double space, and many other desired features.
|
|
|
|
However, most clients support only a handful of HTML Level 3 features
|
|
(such as the partial implementation of tables in Mosaic) at the time
|
|
of this writing. If you have access to a Unix system with the X Window
|
|
System installed, you can try out many features of HTML Level 3 using
|
|
the experimental Arena browser.
|
|
|
|
You can access information about new developments in HTML at the CERN
|
|
server (at the URL
|
|
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html ).
|
|
|
|
(HTML Level 1 is the original version. HTML Level 2 is essentially the
|
|
same, but with the addition of forms.)
|
|
|
|
5.7.7: HOW CAN I MAKE TRANSPARENT AND INTERLACED GIFS? AND WHAT ARE THEY?
|
|
|
|
Transparent GIFs are useful because they appear to blend in smoothly
|
|
with the user's display, even if the user has set a background color
|
|
that differs from that the developer expected. They do this by
|
|
assigning one color to be transparent -- if the web browser supports
|
|
transparency, that color will be replaced by the browser's background
|
|
color, whatever it may be.
|
|
|
|
Interlaced GIFs appear first with poor resolution and then improve in
|
|
resolution until the entire image has arrived, as opposed to arriving
|
|
linearly from the top row to the bottom row. This is great to get a
|
|
quick idea of what the entire image will look like while waiting for
|
|
the rest. This doesn't do much for you if your web browser doesn't
|
|
support progressive display as the image is downloaded, but
|
|
non-progressive-display web browsers will still display interlaced
|
|
GIFs once they have arrived in their entirety.
|
|
|
|
To create transparent and interlaced GIFs, check out David Koblas'
|
|
giftool, a program which can manipulate those options and many more
|
|
aspects of your GIF file.
|
|
|
|
In addition, there is a document explaining transparent GIFs available
|
|
at the URL http://melmac.corp.harris.com/transparent_images.html . You
|
|
can fetch the program giftrans by anonymous ftp from
|
|
ftp.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de at the path /pub/net/www/tools/giftrans.c.
|
|
|
|
There is also a Perl Script (URL is:
|
|
http://www.omron.co.jp:80/~jfriedl/perl/ ) which makes transparent
|
|
GIFs.
|
|
|
|
There is also a utility for the Macintosh, Transparency (URL is:
|
|
http://www.med.cornell.edu/~giles/projects.html#transparency).
|
|
|
|
5.7.8: HOW COME MAILTO: URLS DON'T WORK?
|
|
|
|
The mailto: URL is a feature found in Lynx, Netscape, Spry Mosaic, the
|
|
latest NCSA Mosaics, Emacs w3 mode and many other browsers. In
|
|
general, about 80% of web browsers support mailto: at the time of this
|
|
writing. However, it is not in numerous older browsers. In the
|
|
meantime, you can set up forms which send mail to you; see Section
|
|
5.7.3.2.
|
|
|
|
5.7.9: HOW CAN I RESTRICT AND CONTROL ACCESS TO MY SERVER?
|
|
|
|
All major servers have features that allow you to limit access to
|
|
particular sites, and many clients have authentication features that
|
|
allow you to identify specific users. There is a tutorial on security
|
|
and user authentication with the NCSA server and Mosaic available,
|
|
written by Marc Andreessen (URL is
|
|
http://wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu:8080/auth-tutorial/tutorial.html ).
|
|
See your server documentation for further information.
|
|
|
|
5.7.10: WHICH FORMAT IS BETTER FOR WWW IMAGE PURPOSES, JPEG OR GIF?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JPEG does a better job with realistic images such as scanned
|
|
photographs. Most browsers cannot handle inline JPEGs, however, so you
|
|
must link to them as external images (using a regular <A HREF...>
|
|
instead of <IMG SRC...>).
|
|
|
|
GIF does a better job with crisp, sharp images, such as those
|
|
typically used to construct buttons, graphs and the like. All browsers
|
|
that can display graphics at all can display GIFs inline.
|
|
|
|
5.7.11: HOW CAN I MIRROR PART OF ANOTHER SERVER?
|
|
|
|
Scripts are available to do this, but at this time they are not very
|
|
friendly to the server you are attempting to mirror; their behavior
|
|
resembles that of the more poorly written WWW robots. If you are
|
|
trying to improve access times to a distant server, you will likely
|
|
find the "proxy" capabilities of CERN's WWW server to be a more
|
|
effective and general solution to your problem.
|
|
|
|
5.7.12: HOW CAN I KEEP ROBOTS OFF MY SERVER?
|
|
|
|
Programs that automatically traverse the web can be quite useful, but
|
|
have the potential to make a serious mess of things. Every so often
|
|
someone will write a "depth-first" searching robot that brings servers
|
|
to their knees. See the section on writing robots (4.10) for details.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, most robots on the web follow a simple protocol by which
|
|
you can keep them off your server if you wish, or keep them out of
|
|
portions of your server which are robot traps (ie, they contain an
|
|
infinite number of possible links). Read the document World Wide Web
|
|
Robots, Wanderers and Spiders (URL is:
|
|
http://web.nexor.co.uk/mak/doc/robots/robots.html ) and learn about
|
|
the emerging standards for exclusion of robots from areas in which
|
|
they are not wanted. You can also read about existing robots there,
|
|
including useful cataloging robots you probably do not want to keep
|
|
off your server.
|
|
|
|
5.7.13: HOW CAN I KEEP STATISTICS ABOUT MY WEB SERVER?
|
|
|
|
There are several tools which can generate statistics about your web
|
|
server:
|
|
|
|
getstats
|
|
getstats is a versatile log analyzer, also written in C, which
|
|
provides reports for various time periods with a high degree of
|
|
flexibility. Add-on packages have been written to generate
|
|
reports in HTML and also to generate graphs. You can access the
|
|
getstats home page for more information (URL is
|
|
http://www.eit.com/software/getstats/getstats.html ), or obtain
|
|
the package by anonymous FTP from ftp.eit.com in the directory
|
|
/pub/web.software/getstats.
|
|
|
|
WebStat
|
|
WebStat is a package written in the language Python which
|
|
supplies statistics on usage by domain, country, etc., with
|
|
daily, weekly, monthly and annual reports available. You will
|
|
need Python in order to use it. See the WebStat home page (URL
|
|
is
|
|
|
|
http://www.pegasus.esprit.ec.org/people/sijben/statistics/advertisment.html
|
|
) for details, or obtain Python from ftp.cwi.nl in
|
|
the directory /pub/python and WebStat from
|
|
ftp.pegasus.esprit.ec.org in the directory /pub/misc.
|
|
|
|
Wusage
|
|
Wusage, which I wrote, is a C program which generates simple
|
|
weekly reports in HTML, with inline image graphs displaying
|
|
server growth and the distribution of accesses by continent.
|
|
You can also exclude irrelevant accesses (inline images, local
|
|
machines, etc.) from the results. Read the Wusage home page
|
|
(URL is http://siva.cshl.org/wusage.html ) for more
|
|
information, or obtain Wusage by anonymous FTP from
|
|
isis.cshl.org in the directory pub/wusage.
|
|
|
|
wwwstat
|
|
wwwstat is a full-featured log analyzer written in the language
|
|
Perl. (See the newsgroup comp.lang.perl for more information
|
|
about the language.) See the wwwstat home page (URL is
|
|
http://www.ics.uci.edu/WebSoft/wwwstat/ ) for more information,
|
|
or obtain the package by anonymous FTP from liege.ics.uci.edu
|
|
in the directory /pub/arcadia/wwwstat. See also gwstat (URL is
|
|
http://dis.cs.umass.edu/stats/gwstat.html ), a package which
|
|
produces GIF graphs from the output of wwwstat.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.7.14: I WANT TO GENERATE WEB PAGES FROM A PROGRAM. DO I HAVE TO WRITE A
|
|
CUSTOM SERVER?
|
|
|
|
No, you will not need to write a custom server. Most web servers
|
|
support one variation or another of a standard for adding your own
|
|
programs to the web server. The standard is called CGI (Common Gateway
|
|
Interface).
|
|
|
|
Marc Hedlund has written a FAQ on CGI programming (URL is:
|
|
http://www.halcyon.com/hedlund/cgi-faq/ ) which makes a good
|
|
introduction to the subject. The standard itself can be found at NCSA
|
|
(URL is: http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ ).
|
|
|
|
5.7.14.1: How can I generate GIFs on the fly from my CGI scripts?
|
|
|
|
If you want to generate GIF images on the fly as part of your
|
|
application, examine the gd library (URL is:
|
|
http://siva.cshl.org/gd/gd.html ). Hint: your HTML page and your
|
|
inline images are separate documents with separate URLs. Generate them
|
|
in response to separate requests! (Yes, there are tricks to speed this
|
|
up, but be careful not to break inline images on HTML pages you didn't
|
|
write that refer to your gd-generated image.)
|
|
|
|
It's also possible to use gnuplot and the pbmplus utilities. This is
|
|
slower, but can require less programming if gnuplot is sufficient for
|
|
your purposes. (See archie for both tools.)
|
|
|
|
6: WHERE CAN I DISCUSS THE WORLD WIDE WEB?
|
|
|
|
6.1: What newsgroups discuss the Web?
|
|
|
|
You can find discussion of World Wide Web topics in three newsgroups,
|
|
and one newsgroup which will soon be removed:
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www.users
|
|
A forum for the discussion of WWW client software and its use
|
|
in contacting various Internet information sources. New user
|
|
questions, client setup questions, client bug reports,
|
|
resource-discovery questions on how to locate information on
|
|
the web that can't be found by the means detailed in the FAQ
|
|
and comparison between various client packages are among the
|
|
acceptable topics for this group. Please specify what browser
|
|
and what system type (Windows, Mac, Unix, etc.) your post is
|
|
about if you are asking questions about a specific program.
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www.providers
|
|
A forum for the discussion of WWW server software and the use
|
|
of said software to present information to users. General
|
|
server design, setup questions, server bug reports, security
|
|
issues, HTML page design and other concerns of information
|
|
providers are among the likely topics for this group.
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www.misc
|
|
A forum for general discussion of WWW (World Wide Web)- related
|
|
topics that are NOT covered by the other newsgroups in the
|
|
hierarchy. This will likely include discussions of the Web's
|
|
future, politicking regarding changes in the structure and
|
|
protocols of the web that affect both clients and servers, et
|
|
cetera.
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www.announce
|
|
A moderated forum for the announcement of new and updated World
|
|
Wide Web resources and software.
|
|
|
|
comp.infosystems.www (DEFUNCT)
|
|
The old catch-all newsgroup, which may still exist on your
|
|
system but was officially removed on September 7th, 1994,
|
|
according to David Lawrence, moderator of
|
|
news.announce.newgroups. If your system still carries this
|
|
group, ask your administrator to remove it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6.2: What mailing lists discuss the Web?
|
|
|
|
www-talk@info.cern.ch
|
|
Address: www-talk@info.cern.ch for CONTRIBUTIONS ONLY.
|
|
Administration: listserv@info.cern.ch (robot)
|
|
www-talk-request@info.cern.ch (human). Description: Technical
|
|
discussion, W3 related. Experts to experts. General questions
|
|
to the newsgroups, please. Archive: Not currently served, but
|
|
kept.
|
|
|
|
www-announce@info.cern.ch
|
|
Address: www-announce@info.cern.ch. NOT FOR GENERAL USE -
|
|
serious low-volume announcements only. Administration:
|
|
listserv@info.cern.ch (robot),
|
|
www-announce-request@info.cern.ch (human). Description: Low
|
|
volume summary announcemements of product releases, etc.
|
|
Archive: Not currently public.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7: I WANT TO KNOW MORE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To find out more, use the web. This FAQ hopefully provides enough
|
|
information for you to locate and install a browser on your system. If
|
|
you have system specific questions regarding FTP, networking and the
|
|
like, please consult newsgroups relevant to your particular hardware
|
|
and operating system!
|
|
|
|
Once you're up and running, you may wish to consult the World Wide Web
|
|
Primer by Nathan Torkington. It is available at the URL
|
|
http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-primer.html .
|
|
|
|
Later you may return to this FAQ for answers to some of the more
|
|
advanced questions. I encourage you to check out the changes listed
|
|
early in the document each time the FAQ appears.
|
|
|
|
8: CREDITS
|
|
|
|
Maintainer (11/93 to present): Thomas Boutell, boutell@netcom.com
|
|
|
|
Former Maintainer (until 11/93): Nathan Torkington,
|
|
Nathan.Torkington@vuw.ac.nz
|