User Manual
Table Of Contents

A P P E N D I X B
G L O S S A R Y
Product User Guide
51
Suspend mode The iDL300 will go into a „suspend‟ or „sleep‟ mode when it is idle for a configurable period of time. Suspend mode
works and looks like you have turned the unit off. Press the <POWER> button to suspend (put to sleep) the iDL300.
Press the <POWER> button again for the iDL300 to resume its previous state.
Symbology A symbology is a protocol for arranging the bars and spaces that make up a particular kind of barcode. A bar code is
made up of numbers, letters and computer recognised characters that can be represented in a combination of bars
and spaces. There is not one standard bar code; there are currently over 400 barcode symbologies that serve
different uses, industries or geographic needs.
System tray An area of the display screen located at the bottom, within the Task bar that displays status icons and symbols.
System tray keyboard The System Tray Keyboard Indicators are located at the bottom of the display in the taskbar and contain status
Indicators icons and symbols indicating open features and active applets.
Task bar The Task bar at the bottom of the screen displays the start button icon, icons for active program/s, and the System
tray icons.
Touchscreen display A graphical computer interface display screen that allows the user to enter and select items with a stylus.
Uniform Resource The address of a resource on the Internet. URL syntax is in the form protocol://host/localinfo, where protocol
Locator (URL) specifies the means of returning the object, such as HTTP or FTP. Host specifies the remote location where the
object resides and localinfo is a string, often a file name, passed to the protocol handler at the remote location. Also
called a Uniform resource Identifier.
USB Universal Serial Bus is a protocol for connecting PCs with peripheral devices, including PDTs, PDAs, cameras,
printers, mice, scanners, etc.
WEP Short for Wired Equivalent Privacy, a security protocol for wireless local area networks (WLANs) defined in the
802.11b standard. WEP is designed to provide the same level of security as that of a wired LAN. WEP aims to
provide security by encrypting data over radio waves so that it is protected as it is transmitted from one end point to
another.