Welcome to fedrix.com on July 11 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Uploading and downloading

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Download)
Jump to: navigation, search

In networks, uploading and downloading refer to the two canonical directions (corresponding to send and receive, respectively) that information can move, and further defines such data as being copied and compiled (indicated by the term "loading") to create a complete file, after a period of time. Downloading is distinguished from the related concept of streaming, which indicates a download in which the data is sequentially usable as it downloads, or "streams", and that (typically) the data is not stored.

To download is to receive data to a local system from a remote system, such as a webserver, FTP server, email server, or other similar systems. A download is any file that is offered for downloading or that has been downloaded.

The inverse operation, uploading, is the sending of data from a local system to a remote system, such as a server, or peer, with the intent that the remote system should save a copy of whatever is being transferred.

Contents

[edit] Download

The word's primary usage comes in the form of a verb. Increasingly, websites that offer streaming media or media displayed in-browser, such as YouTube, and which place restrictions on the ability of users to save these materials to their computers after they have been received, say that downloading is not permitted.[1] In this context, "download" implies specifically "receive and save" instead of simply "receive".

[edit] Sideload

When applied to local transfers (sending data from one local system to another local system), it is often difficult to decide if it is an upload or download, as both source and destination are in the local control of the user. Technically if the user uses the receiving device to initiate the transfer then it would be a download and if they used the sending device to initiate it would be an upload. However, as most non-technical users tend to use the term download to refer to any data transfer, the term "sideload" is increasingly being used to cover all local to local transfers to end this confusion.

[edit] Remote upload

When there is a transfer of data from a remote system to another remote system, the process is called "remote uploading". This is used by some online file hosting services. For example: you use a file hosting service at MyRemoteHost. You find a public file at PublicRemoteHost and want to keep a copy in your MyRemoteHost. To have it done you "remote upload" the file from PublicRemoteHost to MyRemoteHost. None of the hosts is in your local network. Without "remote uploading" functionality you should download the file first to your local host and then upload it to the remote file hosting server.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "YouTube - Terms of Use". YouTube, LLC. 2007. http://www.youtube.com/t/terms. Retrieved on 2007-10-25. 


Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs