Lesson 1 |
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| Optimizing Your Browser | Framed | Unframed |
It Translates!Pages on the Web are mostly written in HTML (Hyper Text Mark-up Language) which looks quite meaningless. To see what the HTML of this page looks like: Try this!
Your browser reads and translates the HTML , then displays a fully formatted page. In addition to HTML, there are several dozen other languges (file types) that your browser can handle: text files, graphic files, movies, MP3 audio files and many more.
It Remembers!Navigation Buttons After visiting a page, your browser helps you move from one page to the next, by remembering your browsing path - taking you forward, backward: Your browser, using a memory cache, temporarily keeps image and text data so that pages will reload quickly when moving backward, forward, to the 'home" page. This cache empties each time you quit or exit your browser.
It Organizes!Bookmarks After visiting an interesting site, "Bookmarks" or "Favorites" can be set as permanent electronic markers to help you find your way back to websites on the Internet even after you quit or exit your browser. Folders can be used to organize site locations, so that you can find them more easily.
"Favorites" icons: What can you do with the "Bookmarks" or "Favorites" icons?
It helps you find your way back again!History After visiting a series of web pages, you'll notice your browser keeps a list or path, called "history", of where you have been on the Web. You''ll also notice that when you begin to type the URL of a place you've already been, your browser will offer you the rest of the text of the URL in the address field. It's trying to help! Click the history menu to see where you've been recently. Often there is a "history" icon in the toolbar. Hold your cursor over the icons to find which one is the history icon. In newer versions of Explorer, history is a tab in the "Explorer" toolbar on the left hand side of the browser window.
Internet Explorer History FireFox History
TIPS BACK BUTTON: Instead of clicking the "back button" to move 3 or 4 pages back, try using the history menu to expedite your movement to the exact previous page. REFRESH: If you come to a page on which the images don't show completely (red Xs appear in place of the pictures), click the "refresh" or "reload" button to get your browser to re-display them. Sometimes, you will need to empty your cache to get a page to redisplay properly. HOME: Set the home page to a good portal page. Don't take the preset one that comes with the browser. Find out if there is a good portal page for your field of study. Avoid commercial pages Yahoo, MSN, AOL with annoying animations, pop-up windows and ads. (Enter the home page URL in your Browser preferences.) Some good general portal pages are:
See WebDirectories for more suggestions. BOOKMARKS: Bookmarks/Favorites seem to multiply like rabbits. Use folders to organize them. Put your most frequently used bookmarks directly in your toolbar. In most browsers, you can drag the "Favorites" or "Bookmark" icon directly onto the toolbar.
Centers for Teaching and Learning, San Mateo Community College District, CA USA Updated 2/28/2010 by Sevastopoulos
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