ACCESS Product Manual
13
At a minimum, ACCESS will need an audio connection and a network
connection. Levels of all analog audio I/O is 0dBu (0.775V) nominal. This
level will provide 20dB headroom before the clipping point. Input audio is
reflected on the front panel LED based peak meters. Clipping is indicated
by the
Red LED
on these meters.
ACCESS needs a network connection to be useful. On ACCESS Rack, the
network connection is made via a standard 10/100baseT Ethernet connec-
tion on an RJ-45 connector.
In most ways, ACCESS will look like an ordinary computer to this network.
In fact, ACCESS contains an embedded computer with a Linux-based oper-
ating system and a full network protocol stack.
ACCESS is perfectly capable of working over most LANs, but there may be
situations where a LAN is heavily firewalled, subject to overloaded traffic
conditions, or have security concerns. Better performance is possible if
ACCESS has its own Internet connection. Often, it’s worth the trouble to
install a DSL line especially for ACCESS, especially if the cost is reasonable.
Since there may be bandwidth, firewall, and security concerns with install-
ing ACCESS on a managed LAN, it is recommended that your IT manager
be consulted in these environments. The details that follow assume a work-
ing knowledge of IT topics and network configuration.
We recommend putting ACCESS on a LAN and scoping out its functions
before use. To do this, ACCESS must be given an IP address. This is the In-
ternet location where you can connect to ACCESS through a web browser.
It will also be the address used when another ACCESS is connecting to it.
Every device on an IP network must have a unique IP address. This is a
number between 0 and 4,294,967,295, which is the range of values that
can be represented by 32 binary bits. For simplicity, we break this 32-bit
value into four eight-bit values and represent each as a decimal number
(between 0-255) separated by dots. For example, the Comrex test IP num-
ber is 70.22.155.131.
A device with a public Internet connection can either have a public IP ad-
dress (which is directly accessible by the Internet) or a private IP address,
which is directly accessible only by the LAN on which it is connected.
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