
Bandwidth
Bandwidth refers to
the capacity to move information. In telecommunications,
bandwidth is the width of a communications channel. In digital
communications, bandwidth is measured in bits per second (bps).
bps
Abbreviation for Bits
per Second, which is the unit of measure for the speed of data
communications. Virtually all digital transmission circuits from
WANs to LANs to Internet are defined in bits per second.
CODEC
Acronym for
Compression/Decompression. A codec is a method of digital
compression and decompression which enables you to send and
receive audio and video. Internet Phone Release 5 supports
several different codecs. Quality and video speed varies among
the codecs. Available bandwidth and number of lost packets can
also affect the quality.
Compression
Reduced form of the
information, but not the information itself. Compression saves
transmission time or capacity.
DTMF
Acronym for Dual
Tone Multi-Frequency, which describes push-button or touchtone
dialing. Each push-button on the telephone makes a combination of
one high frequency tone and one low frequency tone. From these
tones, the Signal Processing Card determines the dialed number.
Full-Duplex
Simultaneous
transmission in two directions. Using full duplex transmission,
both parties can speak at the same time. Actually, no phone
communications are really full-duplex on a point to point
connection; the line switches direction so fast that you cannot
tell the difference.
Gateway
A gateway is an
entrance and an exit into a communications network. For example,
a gateway can bridge the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network)
with the Internet, or an Intranet. It's the link which connects
both communication mediums and allows telephone-to-telephone
calls via the Internet.
H.323
The H.323
specification defines packet standards for terminals, equipment
and services for multimedia communications over LANs.
Half-Duplex
Data transmission in
two directions, but not at the same time (such as speakerphones
and CB radios).
Interactive
Voice Response
Interactive Voice
Response, or IVR is a technology by which you can access
functions of a remote computer by using the keypad on your
telephone. For example, a company using IVR may greet a telephone
call with a message like, ``Welcome to VocalTec Communications
Ltd. For the sales department, please dial 1. For customer
support, please dial 2... Please enter the phone number you wish
to dial''..., etc. You respond to the message's prompts by
pressing keys on your telephone's touch keypad.
Internet
The Internet is a
worldwide network of many smaller networks and services, such as
the World Wide Web, e-mail, FTP, Usenet, Gopher...etc.
Internet
Telephony
Internet Telephony
is a technology that lets you make voice phone calls over the
Internet. VocalTec's Internet Phone uses this technology.
IP Address
An IP address is a
unique, 32-bit number for a specific TCP/IP host on the Internet.
IP addresses are normally written in dotted decimal form such as
128.127.50.224. A host uses a fixed IP Address as identification
by the other equipment in the Network.
Intranet
A private network
that uses Internet software and Internet standards like TCP/IP.
ISP
Acronym for Internet
Service Provider, a for-profit organization supplying
inter-connection between an Internet Access Point and end users.
ISPs usually offer one or more methods for accessing the
Internet, such as dial-up serial connections, ISDN, and T1.
LAN
Acronym for Local
Area Network, a short distance data communications network that
links together computers and peripheral devices (such as
printers) under standard control.
MIME
Acronym for
Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions, a specification defining
interchange of text in languages with different character sets
and multimedia e-mail, supporting different computer systems that
use Internet mail standards.
Packet
Switching
Packet switching is
a technology for sending data in packets through a network to a
remote location. Transmitted data is subdivided into individual
packets of data, each with its own unique identification and
destination address. The packets reach their destinations through
different routes, and may also arrive in a different order than
how they were sent.
PSTN
Acronym for Public
Switched Telephone Network, the telephone network that connects
all users.
PPP
Acronym for
Point-to-Point Protocol, PPP is the Internet standard for
transmission of IP packets over serial lines.
QOS
Acronym for Quality
of Service, which can be either a network-oriented measure--such
as bit-error rate--or a user-oriented measure, relating to the
perceived quality received by the end user for audio, video, or
multimedia applications.
RTP
Acronym for
Real-time Transport Protocol, which provides end-to-end network
transport functions suitable for applications transmitting
real-time data, such as audio, video, or simulation data.
SLIP
Acronym for Serial
Line Internet Protocol, which is currently a de facto standard,
commonly used for point-to-point serial connections running
TCP/IP. It is not an Internet standard, See PPP.
T-1
A digital
transmission link with a capacity of 1.544 Mbps. The lines are
widely used to connect networks across remote distances. T-1 uses
two pairs of normal twisted wires, as is common in private homes.
T-1 supports 24 voice conversations, each one digitized at 64
Kbps.
T-1 is a standard
for digital transmission in the U.S., Canada, Hong Kong, and
Japan. In Europe, the equivalent is an E-1 which can handle 30
voice channels.
TCP
Acronym for
Transmission Control Protocol, a protocol for verifying correct
data delivery between two systems. TCP detects errors, or lost
data, and triggers retransmission until the destination receives
the correct data. TCP generally uses the IP protocol to transmit
the information.
TCP/IP
Acronym for
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol, a networking
protocol that provides communication across interconnected
networks, between computers with diverse hardware architectures,
and between various operating systems.
UDP
Acronym for User
Datagram Protocol, a packet-based, wireless protocol. Unlike
connection-based protocols (such as TCP), there is no distinction
between the originator of the request and the response to it.
WAN
Acronym for Wide
Area Network, a communications network that covers a wide
geographic area, such as a state or a country.