Uniden WNP1000 User Manual

Page 28

Advertising
background image

55

SOHO (Small Office/Home Office) – Market segment of professionals who work
at home or in small offices.

Static IP Address - A permanent IP address that is assigned to a node in a
TCP/IP network.

Static Routing - Forwarding data in a network via a fixed path. Static routing
cannot adjust to changing line conditions as can dynamic routing.
Subnet Mask - The method used for splitting IP networks into a series of
subgroups, or subnets. The mask is a binary pattern that is matched up with
the IP address to form part of the host ID address field into a field for subnets.

Switch – 1. A data switch connects computing devices to host computers,
allowing a large number of devices to share a limited number of ports.
2. A device for making, breaking, or changing the connections in an electrical
circuit.

TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) – A method (protocol) used along with the
Internet Protocol (IP) to send data in the form of message units between
computers over the Internet. While IP takes care of handling the actual delivery
of the data, TCP keeps track of the individual units of data (called packets) that
a message is divided into for efficient routing through the Internet.

TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) - The basic
communication language or protocol of the Internet. It can also be used as a
communication protocol in a private network (either an intranet or an extranet).
When you are set up with access to the Internet, your computer is uses the
TCP/IP protocol.

TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol) – A version of the TCP/IP FTP protocol that
has no directory or password capability.

Throughput - The amount of data moved successfully from one place to
another in a given time period.

Topology - A network’s topology is a logical characterization of how the devices
on the network are connected and the distances between them. The most
common network devices include hubs, switches, routers, and gateways.
Most large networks contain several levels of interconnection, the most
important of which include edge connections, backbone connections, and wide-
area connections.

56

UDP (User Datagram Protocol) – A communications method (protocol) that
offers a limited amount of service when messages are exchanged between
computers in a network that uses the Internet Protocol (IP). UDP is an
alternative to the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and, together with IP, is
sometimes referred to as UDP/IP. Like the Transmission Control Protocol, UDP
uses the Internet Protocol to actually get a data unit (called a datagram) from
one computer to another. Unlike TCP, however, UDP does not provide the
service of dividing a message into packets (datagrams) and reassembling it at
the other end. Specifically, UDP doesn’t provide sequencing of the packets that
the data arrives in. This means that the application program that uses UDP
must be able to make sure that the entire message has arrived and is in the
right order. Network applications that want to save processing time because
they have very small data units to exchange (and therefore very little message
reassembling to do) may prefer UDP to TCP.

Upgrade – To replace existing software of firmware with a newer version.

Upload – To send a file transmitted over a network. In a communications
session, upload means transmit, and download means receive.

URL (Uniform Resource Locator) – The address that defines the route to a file
on the Web or any other Internet facility. URLs are typed into the browser to
access Web pages, and URLs are embedded within the pages themselves to
provide the hypertext links to other pages.

VLAN (Virtual LAN) – A logical association that allows users to communicate as
if they were physically connected to a single LAN, independent of the actual
physical configuration of the network.

WAN (Wide-Area Network) - A communications network that covers a wide
geographic area, such as a state or country.

WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) – A data privacy mechanism based on 64-bit
and 128-bit shared key algorithms, as described in the IEEE802.11 standard.

WINIPCFG - Configuration utility based on the Win32 API for querying,
defining, and managing IP addresses within a network. A commonly used utility
for configuring networks with static IP addresses.

Workgroup - Two or more individuals that share files and databases.


Advertising