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ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015 Week 1 Introduction of Electronic Commerce Class List:...
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ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Introduction of Electronic Commerce• Class List: enrolled students
• Background NasdaqBubble, Now
• Course Overview: http://orfe.princeton.edu/courses/orf401/
• Requirements– 4 programming assignments (Labs) – final projects:
• nCommerce (Navigation-based Commerce)• Real-time Management& Control of Mobile Assets Campus Shuttles• Leveraging Google Maps; OpenStreetMap;
Google Maps announces a 400 year advantage over Apple Maps. • Android and the Other SmartPhones: Samung; HTC ; LG ; Sony; Nokia• wrist computers and glasses and Virtual Reality HoloLens .• Beyond SETI and user certified content Wiki; Waze• Spatial Dot Maps http://www.coopercenter.org/demographics/Racial-Dot-Map
– Who’s involved– TA: Chenyi Chen Teaching Assistant Office Hours are Friday 3:30-5:30pm or by
appointment in Transportation Atelier ( Basement ORFE)
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Interesting Sites• Parrot's AR.Drone. The Flying Video Game,
• Map of the Market
• iOnRoad
• Robot Quadrotors Perform James Bond Theme – YouTube
• A Swarm of Nano Quadrotors - YouTube,
• J-Track 3D Satellite Tracking/“
• Drive-Time New Jersey: Your Daily Commute
• Campus Shuttles
• Smart Driving Cars
• Hyundai
• HoloLens
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
The Internet’s Fundamental Empowerment
• It enables:– a needle in a haystack
– to find another needle in that or another haystack
– somewhat efficiently, and
– enable a relationship among the needles
Week 1
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
What is eCommerce ? eBusiness?
• eCommerce: use of the internet to transact business; digitally enabled transactions among organizations and individuals
• eBusiness: refers primarily to the digital enablement of transactions and processes within a firm. (accounting and on-line inventory, optimal management and control of mobile assets.)
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Elements of eCommerce & eBusiness
• eCommerce– Selling, Buying– Customer support– nTertainment– Navigation-based Services; nCommerce– User generated content generation and distribution (crowd sourcing)
• eBusiness– Back-office support (really eBusiness)
• document/funds transfer, documentation, regulatory compliance
– Content generation (crowd sourcing)– Distribution– Design & manufacture– Optimal Management and Control of Mobile Assets
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Unique features of eCommerce Technology
• Ubiquity: available “everywhere”– Radio is VERY important: Tech, telecom giants take sides as FCC proposes large public WiFi networks
• Global reach: knows no boundaries (almost)
• Universal standards: W3C
• Richness: video(+), audio(?), tactile(-), olfaction(0),taste(<0)
• Interactivity: user part off the loop
• Information density: scope, timeliness
• Personalization/Customization: targeted content
• Social Technology: Open to user content contribution
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2013
Week 1
Internet Hierarchy
• (Inter)Network Topology Reference (Alderson, CalTech)
• Phone - Circuit switched– Have a continuous connection
• Internet - Packet switched over a physical network
• ARPANet (1969) > NSFNet (1985) > WWW (1993)
• Protocols govern how applications access the network
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2013
Week 1
International Standards Organization
• created a 7 layer model defining the basic functions:– OSI Reference model
• Open System: different network systems supporting the functions of a related layer can exchange
data • Peer-to-Peer: Data created by one layer and transmitted to another device pertains only to that layer.
Intervening layers do not alter data; they simply add data in order to perform their functions on the network.
W3C site has links to all the details and the “latest&greatest”W3C’s Mission
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
OSI Reference Model
LayerFunction Info transferred TCP/IP1. Application Data to send? Application Message ftp, http, snmp, dns
2. Presentation Data look like? Encrypted/compressed data
3. Session Who is the partner? Session manager
4. TransportWhere is partner? Multiple packets TCP, UDP
5. Network Route to follow? Packets IP, ARP
6. Data Link Each step in route? Frames Ethernet, ppp
7. Physical Use each step? Bits Physical wiring
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Physical Layer (network) hierarchy
Backbone high speed: ATT, MCI/WC
Network Access Points (NAP) Sprint, Pac Bell,
Regional networks CERFnet, Uunet, PSInet
Internet Service Providers (ISP) AOL, ATT, Bell Atl. Mobile (BAM)
User Organizations Tigernet
User
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Network layer operations: several concepts
• Dadagrams: packets move freely
– vs• Virtual Circuits: force circuit-like
behavior
• Routing Method: Varies w/level in Hierarchy
• Packet contents: Address (from, to), version, length, time-to-live, etc., data
• Example: Internet Protocol (IP)
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
What makes IP, IP?
• Fixed length addresses 192.21.33.17– must be unique since routing isn’t
– Domain name system (DNS) coverts quad to name
– standard port numbering: :80 (http) , :25 (mail)
• Allows intermediate networks to fragment datagrams
• It does NOT guarantee delivery• It does NOT ensure integrity of the payload• It does NOT guarantee order of receipt
ORF 401 - Electronic Commerce Spring 2015
Week 1
Transport Layer (host-to-host)
• Issues– how & when to provide reliable comm. over unreliable channels– performance– fragmentation & re-assembly
• Service Models:– connectionless >>> circuit-like– issues error detection, timing, error recovery– examples:
• TCP: reliable, bi-directional, byte string (returns what was received);
• UDP: uses only “check sum” to determine if it got it all. (no confirmed receipt)