OIP (Optimized IP).
Compresses TCP and UDP headers, and
filters unnecessary acknowledgments. OIP makes the most use
of the available bandwidth
OTA (Over the Air).
Standard for the transmission and
reception of application-related information in a wireless
communications system
PHY.
A PHY chip (called PHYceiver) provides the interface to
Ethernet transmission medium. Its purpose is digital access of
the modulated link (usually used together with an MII-chip).
The PHY defines data rates and transmission method
parameters
Ping (Packet Internet Groper).
An Internet utility used to
determine whether a particular IP address is online
PLC (Programmable Logic Controller).
An intelligent device that
can make decisions, gather and report information, and control
other devices
RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service).
A
networking protocol that provides centralized authentication,
authorization, and accounting management for computers to
connect and use a network service
RIPv2.
Dynamic IP routing protocol based on the distance
vector algorithm
Router.
A networking device connecting multiple networks
RS-232.
Industry–standard interface for data transfer
RTU (Remote Terminal Unit).
A SCADA device used to gather
information or control other devices
SCADA (Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition).
A general
term referring to systems gathering data and/or performing
control operations
SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol).
A protocol
used by network management systems to manage and monitor
network-attached devices.
SNTP (Simple Network Time Protocol).
A protocol for
synchronizing clocks of computer systems over packet-
switched, variable-latency data networks. Uses UDP as its
transport layer
Static IP Address.
A fixed address assigned to a computer or
device connected to a network
Static Routing.
Forwarding data in a network via a fixed path
Subnet Mask.
An Ethernet address code determining network
size
Switch.
A device connecting computing devices to host
computers, allowing a large number of devices to share a
limited number of ports
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol).
A network protocol for
transmitting data that requires acknowledgement from the
recipient of data sent
TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol).
A
set of protocols for network communications
Telnet.
User command and TCP/IP protocol used for accessing
remote PCs
TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol).
UDP/IP based file transfer
protocol
Topology.
The physical layout of a network
Transparent.
Device capable of transmitting all data without
regard to special characters, etc
Terminal Server.
Acts as a converter between Ethernet/IP and
RS-232 protocols
UDP (User Datagram Protocol).
Network protocol for
transmitting data that does not require acknowledgement from
the recipient of the sent data
Upgrade.
To replace existing software or firmware with a
newer version
URL (Universal Resource Locator).
The address of a file located
on the Internet
VPN (Virtual Private Network).
A computer network that uses
a public network (example: the Internet) to transmit private
data. VPN users can exchange data as if inside an internal
network even if they are not directly interconnected.