User manual

Appendix B Glossary
Page 79 March 2010
membership organization that includes engineers, scientists and students in
electronics and allied fields. It has more than 300,000 members and is involved
with setting standards for computers and communications.
Infrastructure
mode
A client setting providing connectivity to an AP. As compared to Ad-Hoc mode,
whereby PCs communicate directly with each other, clients set in Infrastructure
Mode all pass data through a central AP. The AP not only mediates wireless
network traffic in the immediate neighborhood, but also provides communication
with the wired network. See Ad-Hoc and AP.
I/O The term used to describe any operation, program or device that transfers data to
or from a computer.
Internet
appliance
A computer that is intended primarily for Internet access, is simple to set up and
usually does not support installation of third-party software. These computers
generally offer customized web browsing, touch-screen navigation, e-mail
services, entertainment and personal information management applications.
IP A set of rules used to send and receive messages at the Internet address level.
IP (Internet
Protocol)
telephony
Technology that supports voice, data and video transmission via IP-based LANs,
WANs, and the Internet. This includes VoIP (Voice over IP).
IP address A 32-bit number that identifies each sender or receiver of information that is sent
across the Internet. An IP address has two parts: an identifier of a particular
network on the Internet and an identifier of the particular device (which can be a
server or a workstation) within that network.
IPX-SPX IPX, short for Internetwork Packet Exchange, a networking protocol used by the
Novell NetWare operating systems. Like UDP/IP, IPX is a datagram protocol
used for connectionless communications. Higher-level protocols, such as SPX
and NCP, are used for additional error recovery services. Sequenced Packet
Exchange, SPX, a transport layer protocol (layer 4 of the OSI Model) used in
Novell Netware networks. The SPX layer sits on top of the IPX layer (layer 3)
and provides connection-oriented services between two nodes on the network.
SPX is used primarily by client/server applications. Whereas the IPX protocol is
similar to IP, SPX is similar to TCP. Together, therefore, IPX-SPX provides
connection services similar to TCP/IP.
ISA A type of internal computer bus that allows the addition of card-based
components like modems and network adapters. ISA has been replaced by PCI
and is not very common anymore.
ISDN A type of broadband Internet connection that provides digital service from the
customer's premises to the dial-up telephone network. ISDN uses standard POTS