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This lesson is all about the internet. The
internet is a very busy place and similar
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to this busy road. Messages like cars are
zooming along to get to their destinations.
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Messages move through the internet very quickly.
Acting out how the internet works will help
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you understand what's happening when you use
the internet. You'll learn how messages get
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from your computer to a favorite website or
from a friend to an email inbox. Just like
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it's easier to navigate busy roads when you
know the roads and can read the signs, traveling
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the internet is not so complicated when you
know what goes on behind the scenes. Sending
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messages on the internet is a little bit like
sending messages in the mail but with a few
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differences. I'm here at Google.com. The IP
address for this website is this number. You
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can think of an IP address as your return
address in the mail. Let's imagine that I
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want to send a message in the mail to someone
in the office down the there. Do you see URL
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and the IP address on that door? I've written
this message and hit send. Unlike the Postal
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Service, the first thing that happens is that
the internet breaks the message into smaller
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parts so it can be sent more easily. These
small parts are called packets. Each packet
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of the message is delivered to the destination
one at a time. These packets are all put together
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in the right order so that the receiver can
read the message correctly. Of course, there
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are many more things to learn about how the
internet works but this is a great start.
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You're on your way to becoming a savvy internet
user! Be sure to tell your family and friends
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what you've learned! My name is Amanda Camp
and I'm a software engineer at Google. I work
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on a team that works on a backend server that
stores profiles and contacts. In my job, we
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think a lot about how contacts can be sent
to other devices, such as your phone. Most
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people have a lot of contacts, you might have
say, 1000 contacts and we don't want to send
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all of those contacts at once to your phone
because it's too large of a message. Similar
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to the way the internet breaks large messages
down into packets, we use a concept called
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paging where we might only send your phone
100 contacts at a time and let your phone
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respond to us and ask for the next 100. The
most exciting thing about software is the
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fact that it can impact the entire world.
I first learned to program when I was about
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nineteen. I think I was already a sophomore
or a junior in college. The first program
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I remember writing is something that converted
Celsius to Fahrenheit. I like programming
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because I like helping people. I can write
programs at Google that help people all over
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the world and that's really mind-boggling
and exciting.