Communication media options, Communication media options -14, Mechanical connector – Hand Held Products 9500 User Manual

Page 58: Irda port, Wireless radios, Software communication programs

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Dolphin® 9500 Series User’s Guide

Communication Media Options

Mechanical Connector

The 17-pin, industrial-grade, mechanical connector on the bottom panel is designed to work only with communication and
charging peripherals sold/manufactured by Hand Held Products. Via these peripherals, the connector supports USB and RS-232
communications, enabling the user to connect the Dolphin terminal to external devices such as scanners and printers.

For more information about the connector, see

Mechanical Connector

on page

3-9.

IrDA Port

The IrDA port enables the Dolphin terminals to transmit data via pulses of light to and from other IrDA-compliant devices, such
as printers and PCs or to other Dolphin terminals.

For more information, see

Using Infrared

on page

6-5.

Wireless Radios

802.11b

Dolphin 9500 Series terminals may be equipped with a WiFi

®

-compliant, interoperable, 2.4 GHz

802.11b, direct sequence spread spectrum, wireless local area network (WLAN) radio.

For more information, see

Wireless LAN Communications with 802.11b

on page

7-1.

Bluetooth

Dolphin 9500 Series terminals may be equipped with a Bluetooth wireless personal area network
(WPAN) radio.

For more information, see

Wireless PAN Communications with Bluetooth

on page

8-1.

GSM/GPRS

Dolphin 9500 Series terminals may be equipped with a GSM/GPRS wireless wide area network
(WWAN) radio.

For more information, see

Wireless WAN Communications with GSM/GPRS

on page

9-1.

Software Communication Programs

Microsoft ActiveSync v3.7

or Higher

Microsoft ActiveSync is a tool that enables Windows Mobile devices, such as the Dolphin 9500
Series, to exchange and synchronize application data with a desktop computer.

For more information, see

Using ActiveSync

on page

6-2.

RAS (Remote Access Services)

RAS is a feature built into Windows NT that enables users to log into an NT-based LAN using a
modem, X.25 connection or WAN link. RAS is fully supported and allows the use of PPP or SLIP
connections for network connectivity.

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