TCP/IP is like the postal service that helps messages travel from one place to another across the internet.
Imagine you're sending a letter to your friend. You write it down, put it in an envelope, and hand it to the mailman. The mailman takes it to the post office, which sends it on its way to your friend's house. That’s how TCP/IP works, it helps messages travel from one computer to another.
How It Works
TCP stands for Transmission Control Protocol. Think of TCP like the person who makes sure your letter gets all the way to your friend. If part of the letter gets lost, they make sure it gets sent again.
IP stands for Internet Protocol. IP is like the address on the envelope, it tells the mail system where to send the letter. Every computer has an IP address, which is like its unique phone number on the internet.
Together, TCP and IP help computers talk to each other clearly, even if they're far apart or something goes wrong along the way!
Examples
- A child sending a letter to a friend across town using a mail truck that follows specific rules for delivery.
- A pizza delivery system where each order is broken into slices and tracked from kitchen to customer.
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See also
- How does the internet actually send data across the world?
- What are packets?
- What are data packets?
- How does the internet actually connect the world?
- How Can a Single Computer Run the Entire Internet?