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Project about:

1.The history of the


internet

2.What is blogging? : 3.How are minorities


represented in the media?

Elaborated by Tropoțel
Daniel
The history of the Internet begins with
the early development of computers and
communications networks (1950 and
1960) and can be divided into several
stages.
The story of the Internet begins long
before the technology that created it
emerged. One of the first people to
juggle the idea of a "wireless world"
system was Nikola Tesla in the early
1900s.
The first functional Internet prototype
appeared in the late 1960s with the
advent of ARPANET. AARPANET used
the concept of "packet switching" to
allow multiple computers to
communicate on a single network. This
technology developed in the 1970s when
Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf created the
TCP - Transmission Control Protocol, a
model of communication between
computers that set standards for how
data could be transmitted over multiple
networks.
Blogging is a practice of composing
online journals, which people usually
do for various purposes.
Some people write for expressing their
views & emotion, and others write for
professional purpose
Due to that, millions of blog posts are
published on the internet every
day. These bloggers
have revolutionized the traditional way
of information consumption. 
Now information is quickly available
on all mobile devices through these
blogs on the click of a few buttons.  
There is a vast Blogging community
that loves to blog on different aspects
of life.  
In general, analyses of media portrayals show
a great deal of variability both across time
and across types of media content. These
variations are reflected in studies of racial
differences in use and enjoyment of media
offerings, and are also evident in research
exploring potential effects that media
portrayals may have on the attitudes and
beliefs that viewers old about race.
Representation plays a key role in how
minorities are perceived by the rest of society.
Some people will argue that well, we do see
people of colour in movies and on TV, but so
many of the times these characters are
compounded by stereotypes

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