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Date: Tue, 26 Nov 1996 18:59:51 GMT
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<html><title> Comp 50 / Fall 96 -- Computing on the Internet </title><head><center> <h1> Comp 50 / Fall 96 -- Computing on the Internet </h1> </center></head><body>This course is being designed as a replacement for COMP 5 (Survey ofComputer Science). A pilot version of this course is being offeredin Fall 1996 with limited enrollment.In Spring 1997, the size will be opened up to around 200.<p>The overall goal of the course is to familiarize students with use ofthe Internet and to give them an understanding of the underlying computational methods that are involved.The course is intended primarily for students with little or nobackground with computing.For students in liberal arts,it counts toward satisfaction of the mathematical sciences distribution requirement.<p>The course uses lectures and scheduled sessions in computer labs.Grading is based primarily on performance on five multiple-choice exams and participation in scheduled labs.Topics covered include:<p><ul> <li> Using a Unix computer system such as emerald. <ul> <li> Basic operations: file manipulation, editing, email, command execution. <li> What's going on behind the scenes: the file system, the shell, transmission of I/O streams through communication equipment. </ul> <li> Nature of the Internet. <ul> <li> Naming schemes: IP addresses, domain names, pathnames, URLs. <li> Mechanisms underlying internetwork communication: overview of IP, UDP, and TCP methods. The nature of client/server computing. <li> Email: how it is formatted and handled. How to read an email header. <li> Nature of network newsgroups. <li> Using browsers. </ul> <li> The HTML language for Web pages. <ul> <li> Syntax. <li> Tags for defining the layout of a document. <li> Tags for linking to other documents. <li> Tags for incorporating images into a document. </ul> <li> Numbers, text, and information. <ul> <li> Binary, hex, and octal numeration; the Ascii code. <li> Representational methods for numbers, messages, text, and images. <li> Measuring the size of a block of information. <li> The rates at which information can be transferred. <li> Data compression. </ul> <li> Encryption of information. <ul> <li> Private key systems. <li> Public key systems. <li> Use of pgp encryption. </ul></ul><p><address> David Krumme krumme@cs.tufts.edu </address></body></html>
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