109
Glossary
Terminal: 1) The screen and keyboard device used in a mainframe environment for interactive data entry. Terminals have no "box", which is
to say they have no file storage or processing capabilities. 2) An H.323 endpoint that provides for real-time, two-way communications with
another terminal, gateway, or H.323 MCU. An H.323 terminal must provide audio and may also provide video and/or data.
Terminal Adapter (TA): An ISDN DTE device for connecting a non-ISDN terminal device to the ISDN network. Similar to a protocol
converter or an interface converter, a TA connects a non-ISDN device between the R and S interfaces. Typically a PC card.
Tie line: A dedicated circuit linking two points without having to dial a phone number (i.e., the line may be accessed by lifting the phone
handset or by pushing a button).
Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM): Division of a transmission facility into two or more channels by allotting the common channel to several
different information channels, one at a time.
Time Slot: One of 24 channels within a T1 line. Each channel has a 64K bps maximum bandwidth. "Time slot" implies the time division
multiplexing organization of the T1 signal.
Toll Call: A call to a location outside of your local service area (i.e., a long distance call).
Tone dialing: One of two methods of dialing a phone, usually associated with Touch-Tone® (push button) phones. Compare with pulse
dialing.
Topology: Physical layout of network components (cables, stations, gateways, and hubs). Three basic interconnection topologies are star,
ring, and bus networks.
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP): A communications protocol used in Internet and in any network that follows the US Department of
Defense standards for internetwork protocol. TCP provides a reliable host-to-host protocol between hosts in packet-switched communications
networks and in interconnected systems of such networks. It assumes that the Internet protocol is the underlying protocol.
Transport Layer: Layer 4 of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model; provides reliable, end-to-end delivery of data, and detects
transmission sequential errors.
Transport Protocol Data Unit (TPDU): A transport header, which is added to every message, contains destination and source addressing
information that allows the end-to-end routing of messages in multi-layer NAC networks of high complexity. They are automatically added to
messages as they enter the network and can be stripped off before being passed to the host or another device that does not support TPDU's.
Trunk: A communication line between two switching systems or offices. Central office trunks connect a PBX to the switching system at the
central office. A tie trunk connects two PBXs.
TSR (terminate and stay resident): A software program that remains active and in memory after its user interface is closed. Similar to a
daemon in UNIX environments.
Tunneling: Encapsulation data in an IP packet for transport across the Internet.
Twisted pair wiring: A type of cabling with one or more pairs of insulated wires wrapped around each other. An inexpensive wiring method
used for LAN and telephone applications, also called UTP wiring.
U
UART (Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter) (pronounced "you art"): A chip that transmits and receives data on the serial
port. It converts bytes into serial bits for transmission, and vice versa, and generates and strips the start and stop bits appended to each
character.
UNIX: An operating system developed by Bell Laboratories that features multiprogramming in a multi-user environment.
Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP): Telephone-type wiring. Transmission media for 10Base-T.
V
V.25bis: An ITU-T standard for synchronous communications between a mainframe or host and a modem using HDLC or other character-
oriented protocol.
V.54: The ITU-T standard for local and remote loopback tests in modems, DCEs and DTEs. The four basic tests are:
• local digital loopback (tests DTE send and receive circuits),
• local analog loopback (tests local modem operation),
• remote analog loopback (tests comm link to the remote modem), and
• remote digital loopback (tests remote modem operation).
Virtual Circuit: A logical connection. Used in packet switching wherein a logical connection is established between two devices at the start
of transmission. All information packets follow the same route and arrive in sequence (but do not necessarily carry a complete address).
Z
Zone: A collection of all H.323 endpoints and MCUs managed by a single Gatekeeper. A zone must include may include LAN segments
connected by using routers.
Summary of Contents for MultiVOIP 200 MVP200
Page 1: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Voice Fax Over IP Networks Model MVP200 H 323 Mode User Guide...
Page 5: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 1 Introduction and Description...
Page 16: ...16 MultiVOIP 200 User Guide...
Page 17: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 2 Installation...
Page 23: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 3 Software Loading and Configuration...
Page 51: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 4 MultiVOIP 200 Software...
Page 75: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 5 Remote Configuration and Management...
Page 83: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Chapter 6 Warranty Service and Tech Support...
Page 87: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Appendixes...
Page 96: ...96 MultiVOIP 200 User Guide...
Page 97: ...Voice Fax over IP Networks Glossary...
Page 113: ...113 Index...