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How to Set Up and Maintain a Web Site by Lincoln D. Stein — book cover

How to Set Up and Maintain a Web Site

by Lincoln D. Stein
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Overview

Here in one complete volume is absolutely everything you need to build and maintain a high-quality web site. Expanded and updated from the original edition, this book incorporates all of the latest tools--CGI, HTML 3.2, Java™, JavaScript, VRML, and Perl 5--as well as offering coverage of web servers for the UNIX, Macintosh, and Windows NT environments.

Featuring step-by-step explanations and experience-based guidance, the book follows every stage of the process of creating a web page, including:

  • A lucid description of the Web and how it all works
  • Finding, compiling, installing, and configuring the appropriate web server software, with detailed looks at Apache, WebSite, and WebSTAR™
  • Understanding the ins and outs of HTTP, including such new features as cookies, proxies, and virtual hosts
  • Creating hypertext documents with HTML 3.2
  • Working with multimedia and VRML
  • Using CGI and Perl 5 to create server scripts that run such features as searchable indexes, fill-out forms, clickable maps, and gateways to other services
  • Getting started with JavaScript, including the complete code for a working shopping cart
  • Adding Java applets to your pages

You will also find an in-depth look at web security, including the first printed version of the World Wide Web Security FAQ. Finally, the book's illustrated "Style Guide" shows you how to put it all together to create a fully functioning web site that balances eye-catching graphics with the practical need for speedy performance.



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About the Author, Lincoln D. Stein


Lincoln Stein has an M.D. and is a scientist at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. When the Web first emerged, he created and maintained one of the earliest Internet sites for distribution of Human Genome Project data and has since become an acknowledged expert in Web, network, and Perl programming. Known for his exceptional ability to synthesize and present complex information, he writes for The Perl Journal and Web Techniques magazines and is the author of four other books.



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Editorials

Ray Duncan

Gene Pools and Web Tools

The Human Genome Project, which has been called the first Big Science project in biology, has as its 15-year objective the complete determination of the human genetic code -- the sequencing of the estimated 3 billion base pairs in human DNA. The Human Genome Project has often been compared to World War II's Manhattan Project in its ambition and scope. Yet, unlike the Manhattan Project, which gathered together and sequestered the country's best physicists and mathematicians in an isolated, pressure-cooker environment until they produced the desired results, the Human Genome Project is almost completely decentralized. The funding agencies have doled out tiny pieces of the action to scores of research teams scattered all around the world.

In spite of this decentralization, which you might naturally suspect would be a barrier to effective collaboration and lead to fragmented, duplicated efforts, the Human Genome Project is ahead of schedule and under budget. How is this possible? The data generated by each research team is electronically submitted over the Internet to one of many specialized databases, depending on its nature. There are relational databases for gene mapping, gene sequences, protein sequences, gene linkages, genetic probes, genetic diseases, individual chromosomes, and so on. The data is then linked to related data in the same and other databases, and made available almost immediately to the entire genome research community via Web servers that are universally accessible on the Internet.

It's one of life's stunning coincidences that the World Wide Web emerged from the high-energy physics research community just in time to help make the Human Genome Project feasible. And it's another astonishing twist of fate that a pathologist-turned-genome scientist at MIT, Lincoln Stein, has given back to the computing community what is without a doubt the most lucid, comprehensive, and authoritative book on the creation and maintenance of industrial-strength websites.

Institute/MIT Center for Genome Research back when Marc Andreeson was still a graduate student getting paid minimum wage. As he scaled up and enhanced the site over the subsequent years, he investigated and thoroughly mastered every detail of UNIX, HTML, CGI, Perl, server clustering, database interfaces, and other arcane topics too numerous to mention. This wealth of practical experience, coupled with an unerring instinct for the crucial detail and a formidable talent for technical writing, makes Stein's book essentially unique.

The second edition of How to Set Up and Maintain a Web Site builds on the strengths of the first edition with meticulous editing, a cleaner and more attractive design, a CD-ROM packed with useful Web software and utilities, and added chapters on recent developments ranging from JavaScript to VRML. If you run a Web server, or more importantly, if you anticipate setting up a Web server for your company or organization, this is the book to buy.--Dr. Dobb's Electronic Review of Computer Books

Book Details

Published
December 11, 1996
Publisher
Addison Wesley
Pages
793
Format
Other Format
ISBN
9780201634624

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