Chapter 2: Setting Up and Getting Started
12
2 Insert the other end of the modem cable
into a telephone wall jack. (The modem
will not work with digital or PBX
telephone lines.)
3 If you want, you can connect a telephone
to the PHONE jack on the modem on the
back of your computer.
Using the World Wide Web
The World Wide Web is a multimedia window to the
Internet that gives you access to millions of
information sources.
Information on the Web comes to you on
Web pages
,
which are electronic documents that you view using a
Web page display program called a
browser
. You can
use any of the commercially available Web browsers,
like Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator.
Web pages can contain text, animations, music, and
other multimedia features. A group of related Web
pages is called a
Web site
. You can access Web sites
to shop, track investments, read the news, download
programs, and much more.
You can explore a Web site or visit other Web sites by
clicking areas on a Web page called
links
or
hyperlinks
.
A link may be colored or underlined text, a picture, or
an animated image. You can identify a link by moving
the mouse pointer over it. If the pointer changes to a
hand, the item is a link.
To learn more about using the Web browser features,
click
Help
in the menu bar.
MU0000000_eM_ENG_V09A3.book Page 12 Wednesday, August 19, 2009 5:06 PM
Summary of Contents for PW.NAT05.002
Page 1: ...User Guide EM001 ...
Page 11: ...Chapter 1 1 Checking Out Your Computer ...
Page 16: ...Chapter 1 Checking Out Your Computer 6 ...
Page 17: ...Chapter 2 7 Setting Up and Getting Started ...
Page 35: ...Chapter 3 25 Troubleshooting ...
Page 61: ...Appendix A 51 Regulations and safety notices ...
Page 71: ......
Page 72: ...Remark All images are for reference purposes only Actual configuration may vary V09A8 ...