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    |  | Acessing the Internet |  
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  | The Net connections can be based on wire-line and wireless access technolgies. 
 
 
 Usually several kinds of network connections are employed at once. Generally speaking, when an E-mail message is sent it travels from the user's computer via copper wires or coaxial cables
  ISDN lines, etc., to an Internet Service Provider, from there, via fibre-optic cables, to the nearest Internet exchange, and on into a  backbone network,  tunneling across the continent und diving through submarine  fibre-optic cables across the Atlantic to another  Internet exchange, from there, via another backbone network and across another regional network to the Internet Service Provider of the supposed message recipient, from there via cables and wires of different  bandwidth arriving at its destination, a workstation permanently connected to the Internet. Finally a sound or flashing icon informs your virtual neighbor that a new message has arrived. 
 Satellite communication
 
 Although facing competition from fiber-optic cables as cost-effective solutions for broadband data transmission services, the space industry is gaining increasing importance in global communications. As computing, telephony, and audiovisual technologies converge, new wireless technologies are rapidly deployed occupying an increasing market share and accelerating the construction of high-speed networks.
 
 Privatization of satellite communication
 
 Until recently transnational satellite communication was provided exclusively by intergovernmental organizations as
  Intelsat, Intersputnik and Inmarsat. 
 Scheduled privatization of intergovernmental satellite consortia:
 
 
 |  	 	 	 	 	 		| Satellite 			consortia 
 
 | Year of 			foundation 
 
 | Members 
 
 | Scheduled date 			for privatization 
 
 |   		|  Intelsat 
 
 | 1964 
 
 | 200 nations under 			the leadership of the USA 
 
 | 2001 
 
 |   		| Intersputnik 
 
 | 1971 
 
 | 23 nations under 			the leadership of Russia 
 
 | ? 
 
 |   		| Inmarsat 
 
 | 1979 
 
 | 158 nations (all 			members of the International Maritime Organization) 
 
 | privatized since 			1999 
 
 |   		| Eutelsat 
 
 | 1985 
 
 | Nearly 50 European 			nations 
 
 | 2001 
 
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 When Intelsat began to accumulate losses  because of management failures and the increasing market share of fiber-optic cables, this organizational scheme came under attack. Lead by the USA, the Western industrialized countries successfully pressed for the privatization of all satellite consortia they are members of and for competition by private carriers.
 
 As of February 2000, there are 2680 satellites in service. Within the next four years a few hundred will be added by the new private satellite systems. Most of these systems will be so-called Low Earth Orbit satellite systems, which are capable of providing global mobile data services on a high-speed level at low cost.
 
 Because of such technological improvements and increasing competition, experts expect satellite-based broadband communication to be as common, cheap, and ubiquitous as satellite TV today within the next five or ten years.
 
 Major satellite communication projects
 
 
 |  	 	 	 	 	 	 		| Project name 
 
 | Main investors 
 
 | Expected cost 
 
 | Number of 			satellites 
 
 | Date of service 			start-up 
 
 |   		| Astrolink 
 
 | Lockheed Martin, 			TRW, Telespazio, Liberty Media Group 
 
 | US$ 3.6 billion 
 
 | 9 
 
 | 2003 
 
 |   		| Globalstar 
 
 | 13 investors 			including Loral Space & Communications, Qualcomm, Hyundai, 			Alcatel, France Telecom, China Telecom, Daimler Benz and 			Vodafone/Airtouch 
 
 | US$ 3.26 billion 
 
 | 48 
 
 | 1998 
 
 |   		| ICO 
 
 | 57 investors 			including British Telecom, Deutsche Telecom, Inmarsat, TRW and 			Telefonica 
 
 | US$ 4.5 billion 
 
 | 10 
 
 | 2001 
 
 |   		| Skybridge 
 
 | 9 investors 			including Alcatel Space, Loral Space & Communications, 			Toshiba, Mitsubishi and Sharp 
 
 | US$ 6.7 billion 
 
 | 80 
 
 | 2002 
 
 |   		| Teledesic 
 
 | Bill Gates, Craig 			McCaw, Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdul Aziz Alsaud, Abu Dhabi 			Investment Company 
 
 | US$ 9 billion 
 
 | 288 
 
 | 2004 
 
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 Source: Analysys Satellite Communications Database
 
 
 
 
  
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          |  World Wide Web (WWW) Probably the most significant Internet service, the World Wide Web is not the essence of the Internet, but a subset of it. It is constituted by documents that are linked together in a way you can switch from one document to another by simply clicking on the link connecting these documents. This is made possible by the Hypertext Mark-up Language (HTML), the authoring language used in creating World Wide Web-based documents. These so-called hypertexts can combine text documents, graphics, videos, sounds, and
  Java applets, so making multimedia content possible. 
 Especially on the World Wide Web, documents are often retrieved by entering keywords into so-called search engines, sets of programs that fetch documents from as many
  servers as possible and index the stored information. (For regularly updated lists of the 100 most popular words that people are entering into search engines, click  here). No search engine can retrieve all information on the whole World Wide Web; every search engine covers just a small part of it. 
 Among other things that is the reason why the World Wide Web is not simply a very huge database, as is sometimes said, because it lacks consistency. There is virtually almost infinite storage capacity on the Internet, that is true, a capacity, which might become an almost everlasting too, a prospect, which is sometimes
  consoling, but  threatening too. 
 According to the Internet domain survey of the
  Internet Software Consortium the number of Internet host computers is growing rapidly. In October 1969 the first two computers were connected; this number grows to 376.000 in January 1991 and 72,398.092 in January 2000. 
 
  World Wide Web History Project, http://www.webhistory.org/home.html 
 
  http://www.searchwords.com/ 
  http://www.islandnet.com/deathnet/ 
  http://www.salonmagazine.com/21st/feature/199... 
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