Glossary – NComputing L300 User Manual

Page 56

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L300/L230/L130 User Manual


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Glossary

Access device: a network computing device using NComputing patented technology. It doesn't use

CPU, VGA, and PC chipsets; it only uses a programmable SoC to connect to a Host PC. An access
device using NComputing User eXtension Protocol (UXP) can be connected to Host PCs by using the
LAN cable. Also, it can be connected to remote PCs through the Internet using TCP/IP.

Administrator: a person who is responsible for managing a multi-user computing environment, such as

a local area network (LAN). The responsibilities of the system administrator typically include: installing
and configuring system hardware and software; establishing and managing user accounts; upgrading
software; and backup and recovery tasks.

Alias: a fictitious name used by an individual as an alternative to her or his true name.

Client/Server: describes the relationship between two computer programs in which one program, the

client, makes a service request from another program, the server, which fulfills the request.

Console: the text entry and display device for system administration messages, particularly those from

the

BIOS

or

boot loader

, the

kernel

, the

init

system and the

system logger

.

DHCP: (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a communications protocol that lets network

administrators centrally manage and automate the assignment of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses in an
organization's network. Without DHCP, the IP address must be entered manually at each computer in
an organization and a new IP address must be entered each time a computer moves to a new location
on the network.

Download: the transmission of a file from one computer system to another.

Ethernet: the most widely-installed local area network (LAN) technology - specified in a standard, IEEE

802.3.

Firewall: a set of related programs (located at a network gateway server) that protect the resources of a

private network from users on other networks and control what outside resources its own users have
access to. (The term also implies the security policy that is used with the programs.)

Gateway: a network point that acts as an entrance to another network. On the Internet, a node or

stopping point can be either a gateway node or a host (end-point) node.

Host Computer: a computer in which the vSpace program has been installed

Internet: a worldwide system of computer networks in which users at any one computer can, if they

have permission, get information from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other
computers).

IP Address: the Internet Protocol (

IP

) is basically the set of rules for one network communicating with

any other (or occasionally, for broadcast messages, all other networks). Each network must know its
own address on the Internet and that of any other networks with which it communicates. To be part of
the Internet, an organization needs an Internet network number, which it can request from the Network
Information Center (NIC). This unique network number is included in any packet sent out of the network
onto the Internet.

LAN: local area network (LAN) is a group of computers and associated devices that share a common

communications line or wireless link and typically share the resources of a single processor or server
within a small geographic area (for example, within an office building). Usually, the server has
applications and data storage that are shared in common by multiple computer users. A local area

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