Network glossary, Bluetooth settings – HP Photosmart D7460 Printer User Manual

Page 51

Advertising
background image

Parameter

Description

Total Packets
received

The number of packets received by the HP Photosmart without error since it
has been turned on. The counter clears after the HP Photosmart is turned off.

Bluetooth settings
The following table describes the Bluetooth settings shown on the network configuration
page.

Parameter

Description

Device Address

The hardware address of the Bluetooth device.

Device Name

The device name assigned to the printer, which can identify it on a Bluetooth
device.

Passkey

A value that the user must enter in order to print via Bluetooth.

Visibility

Shows whether or not the HP Photosmart is visible to Bluetooth devices that
are within range.

Visible to all: Any Bluetooth device within range can print to the
HP Photosmart.

Not visible: Only Bluetooth devices that have stored the device address
of the HP Photosmart can print to it.

Security

The level of security set for an HP Photosmart connected by Bluetooth.

Low: The HP Photosmart does not require a passkey. Any Bluetooth
device within range can print to it.

High: The HP Photosmart requires a passkey from the Bluetooth device
before allowing the device to send a print job.

Network glossary

access point

A network router that has wireless capability.

ASCII

American Standard Code for Information Interchange. The standard for
numbers used by computers to represent all the uppercase and lowercase
Latin letters, numbers, punctuation, etc.

AutoIP

A feature of the installation software, which determines the configuration
parameters of devices on the network.

DHCP

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. A server on the network that supplies
configuration parameters to devices on the network. On small networks, this
could be a router.

DNS

Domain Name Service. When you use the Web or send an e-mail message,
you use a domain name to do it. For example, the URL http://www.hp.com
contains the domain name hp.com. The DNS on the Internet translates the
domain name into an IP address. Devices use the IP addresses to refer to
one another.

DNS-SD

See DNS. The SD portion stands for Service Discovery. This is part of a
protocol developed by Apple that enables automatic discovery of computers,
devices, and services on IP networks.

DSL

Digital Subscriber Line. A high-speed connection to the Internet.

Chapter 4

(continued)

50

Finish setting up the HP Photosmart

Finish set

up

Advertising