Multi-Tech Systems MT4X56USB User Manual

Page 81

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Glossary

MT4X56USB

81

Bus Enumeration: Detecting and identifying Universal Serial Bus devices.

Byte: The unit of information a computer can handle at one time. The most common understanding is that a byte consists
of 8 binary digits (bits), because that’s what computers can handle. A byte holds the equivalent of a single character (such
as the letter A).

C

Call Setup Time: The time to establish a circuit-switched call between two points. Includes dialing, wait time, and CO/long
distance service movement time.

Capabilities: Those attributes of a Universal Serial Bus device that are administerable by the host.

Carrier Group Alarm (CGA): A T1 service alarm generated by a channel bank when an OOF condition occurs for a
predefined length of time (usually 300mS to 2.5 seconds). The CGA causes the calls using a trunk to be dropped and for
trunk conditioning to be applied.

Carrier signal: An analog signal with known frequency, amplitude and phase characteristics used as a transport facility for
useful information. By knowing the original characteristics, a receiver can interpret any changes as modulations, and
thereby recover the information.

CCITT (Consultative Committee for International Telephone and Telegraph): An advisory committee created and
controlled by the United Nations and headquartered in Geneva whose purpose is to develop and to publish
recommendations for worldwide standardization of telecommunications devices. CCITT has developed modem standards
that are adapted primarily by PTT (post, telephone and telegraph) organizations that operate phone networks of countries
outside of the U.S. See also ITU.

Central Office (CO): The lowest, or most basic level of switching in the PSTN (public switched telephone network). A
business PABX or any residential phone connects to the PSTN at a central office.

Centrex: A multi-line service offered by operating telcos which provides, from the telco CO, functions and features
comparable to those of a PBX for large business users. See also “Private Branch Exchange”, “Exchange”.

Channel: A data communications path between two computer devices. Can refer to a physical medium (e.g., UTP or coax),
or to a specific carrier frequency.

Channel Bank: A device that acts as a converter, taking the digital signal from the T1 line into a phone system and
converting it to the analog signals used by the phone system. A channel bank acts as a multiplexer, placing many slow-
speed voice or data transactions on a single high-speed link.

Characteristics: Those qualities of a Universal Serial Bus device that are unchangeable; for example, the device class is a
device characteristic.

Circuit-switched Network: A technology used by the PSTN that allocates a pair of conductors for the exclusive use of one
communication path. Circuit switching allows multiple conversations on one talk path only if the end-users multiplex the
signals prior to transmission.

Circuit Switching: The temporary connection of two or more communications channels using a fixed, non-shareable path
through the network. Users have full use of the circuit until the connection is terminated.

Clear Channel: A transmission path where the full bandwidth is used (i.e., no bandwidth needed for signaling, carrier
framing or control bits). A 64 Kbps digital circuit usually has 8 Kbps used for signaling. ISDN has two 64 Kbps circuits, and a
16 Kbps packet service of which part is used for signaling on the 64K channels.

Client-Server: In TCP/IP, the model of interaction in distributed data processing in which a program at one site sends a
request to a program at another site and awaits a response. The requesting program is called a client; the answering
program is called a server.

Cluster Controller: A device that can control the input/output operations of more than one device connected to it. A cluster
controller may be controlled by a program stored and executed in the unit, or it may be entirely controlled by hardware.

Committed Burst Size: The maximum number of bits that the frame relay network agrees to transfer during any
measurement interval.

Committed Information Rate (CIR): An agreement a customer makes to use a certain minimum data transmission rate (in
bps). The CIR is part of the frame relay service monthly billing, along with actual usage, that users pay to their frame relay
service provider.

Compression: 1. The process of eliminating gaps, empty fields, redundancies, and unnecessary data to shorten the length
of records or blocks. 2. In SNA, the replacement of a string of up to 64-repeated characters by an encoded control byte to
reduce the length of the data stream to the LU-LU session partner. The encoded control byte is followed by the character
that was repeated (unless that character is the prime compression character). 3. In Data Facility Hierarchical Storage
Manager, the process of moving data instead of allocated space during migration and recall in order to release unused
space. 4. Contrast with decompression.

COMx Port: A serial communications port on a PC.

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