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Information Technology Glossary
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Y Z Acronyms
A
abbreviated dialing - The ability of a telephone
user to reach frequently called numbers by using less than
seven digits. Synonym: Speed Dialing.
access - (1) Point at which entry is gained into a
circuit or a network. May be switched or dedicated. (2)
Ability to obtain data from a storage device or peripheral.
(3) Type of connection between CPE and network.
access charge - A fee paid by long-distance
carriers to local telephone companies for use of local
facilities, and by telephone subscribers to obtain access to
local networks.
access code - Preliminary digits a user is
required to dial to be connected to a particular trunk
group, channel or line. (2) A short sequence of digits
allowing a user to access a specific facility, service,
feature or function of a telecommunications network or
computer system.
access control - (1) Action taken to permit
ordinary use of the components of a communications system.
(2) The tasks performed by hardware, software and
administrative controls to monitor system operation, ensure
data integrity, perform user identification, record system
access and changes and grant users access.
access line - A circuit between a subscriber and a
switching center. Any line giving access to a larger system
or network. Also, the private lines feeding a common control
switching arrangement or enhanced private switched
communications service switch from a PBX.
access method - (1) A technique for moving data,
voice or video between main storage and input/output
devices. (2) In local area networks, the technique and/or
program code used to determine use of the communications
medium by granting access selectively to individual
stations.
account - Within billing terminology, this
represents a customer's product or service location.
account code - Two-digit code associated with an
authorization code, identifying the caller.
acknowledge character (ack) - A transmission
control character transmitted as an affirmative response to
a connecting station or to a sender. [May also be used as an
accuracy control character.]
acoustic coupler - A special type of modem that
converts acoustic energy (sound waves) into electrical
energy, allowing a standard telephone handset to be attached
to a computer or data terminal for data transmission.
adaptive transform coding - An audio coding
algorithm.
address - (1) In a communications network, the
identifying designation of an entity that is physically
and/or logically distinct. (2) The destination of a message.
(3) In software, a location that can be specifically
referred to in a program. It can refer to a storage
location, a terminal, a peripheral device, a cursor location
or any other unit or component in a computer network.
alarm - A visual or audio signal which signifies
that an error has occurred or an abnormal condition exists.
algorithm - A prescribed set of well-defined rules
for the solution of a problem in a finite number of steps.
For example a full statement of an arithmetic procedure for
evaluating sine x to a stated precision.
all trunks busy (ATB) - A single tone interrupted
at a 120 impulses per minute (ipm) rate to indicate all
lines or trunks in a routing group are busy.
allocate - To assign a resource for use in
performing a specific task.
alpha test - The stage during the research and
development of a new product during which a prototype of the
system is operated to determine whether the system concept
and design are functional. Stage to identify areas that need
further development and/or enhancement.
alpha-geometric - A high resolution videotex
display technique. [Pictures are created by instructions
such as draw a line, draw a circle, fill in an area. Picture
definition is dependent upon the resolution capability of
the display terminal.]
alpha-mosaic - A low resolution block-oriented
videotex display technique. Picture definition is fixed at
64 by 60 elements, or pixels, no matter what the resolution
capability of the display terminal.
alternate route - A secondary communications path
used to reach a destination if the primary path is
unavailable.
alternate voice data (AVD) - A single transmission
facility which can be used for either voice or data.
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(ACSII) - A code with seven information signals plus one
parity check signal, designed for interworking between
computers (i.e., the transmittal of text). The most popular
coding method used by computers for converting letters,
numbers, punctuation and control codes with digital form.
amplifier - (1) Device which receives an input
signal in wave form and outputs a magnified signal. (2)
Electronic device used to increase signal power or
amplitude.
analog - A transmission method employing a
continuous (rather than pulsed or digital) electrical signal
that varies in amplitude or frequency in response to changes
of sound, light, position, etc., imposed on a transducer in
the sending device; opposite of digital.
analog signal - A signal in the form of a
continuous varying physical quantity such as voltage -which
reflects variations in some quantity; or loudness in the
human voice as opposed to digital.
answerback - A signal sent by a data receiver to a
data transmitter indicating it is ready to receive data, or
is acknowledging the receipt of data. [The answerback is
typically part of the "handshaking" between devices.]
answer supervision - (1) An off-hook signal
indicating when the called party answers; used to read calls
for billing purposes. (2) A signal generated by the
originating switch (hardware answer supervision) or by the
switch which terminates the call (software answer
supervision, when FGA or WATS is used to terminate the
call).
append - To change or alter a file or program.
application layer - The top layer of the OSI
seven-layer logical structure for data services; the
end-user layer.
applications software - The instructions that
direct the hardware to perform specific functions. Common
software applications include payroll, inventory control and
electronic spreadsheets.
architecture - The interaction between hardware
and software in a computing system to achieve the most
economic, efficient, secure, rapid or low-maintenance
system.
archive - A procedure for transferring information
from an on-line storage diskette or memory area to an
off-line storage medium.
area code - The three-digit numbering plan area
code in North America which permits direct distance dialing
on the telephone system. [The first digit is never 1 or 0,
and the second digit is always 1 or 0.] Synonym: Numbering
Plan Area (NPA).
artificial intelligence - The capability of a
computer to perform functions that are normally associated
with human intelligence, such as reasoning, learning or
self-improvement.
assembler - (1) A program capable of translating
assembly code into digit code. The first major step in the
automation of software development. Permitting symbolic
(i.e., named) references to storage locations, rather than
requiring the use of numbers, and eliminating the necessity
to program in binary or other machine language. Synonym:
assembly program.
assembly code - Programming language with
statements that may be instructions or declarations. The
instructions usually have a one-to-one correspondence with
machine instructions.
assign - To give a new value to a variable during
the running of a program.
asterisk laws - Gives consumers the right to say
they don't want to receive marketing phone calls by choosing
to have an asterisk next to their names in the telephone
book. The asterisk means "no phone solicitations."
asynchronous computer - A computer in which each
operation starts as a result of a signal generated by the
completion of the previous operation, or by the availability
of the parts of the computer required by the next event or
operation.
asynchronous transmission - (1) A mode of data
communications transmission in which time intervals between
transmitted characters may be of unequal length. (2)
Transmission independently controlled by start and stop
elements at the beginning and end of each character.
Synonym: start-stop transmission.
attenuation - Reduction in power level due to line
resistance, leakages or induction which results in the
received signal being lower in volume than the original
transmitted signal. [In optical fiber systems there are
other causes of attenuation, such as absorption, scattering
and losses into radiation modes. It is usually expressed in
decibel (dB).]
audible ringing tone - The information tone sent
back to the calling party to indicate the called line is
being rung.
audio response unit (ARU) - Output device which
provides a spoken response to digital inquiries from a
telephone or other device. The response is usually assembled
by a computer from a prerecorded vocabulary of words.
authorization code - (1) Code that identifies the
customer, and is used for billing purposes and validation by
the switch. (2) An identification number that the customer
enters when placing a call.
autodial - Automatic dialing; the capability of a
terminal, modem, computer or a similar device to place a
call and establish a connection over the switched telephone
network without operator intervention.
automatic call distributor (ACD) - A switching
system designed to queue and/or distribute a large volume of
incoming calls to the next available "answering" position
among a group of attendants.
automatic callback - A feature of a communications
device or network that records, and can dial, the
originating phone number of the last incoming call.
automatic dialing unit - A device which
automatically generates a predetermined set of dialing
digits when the corresponding button is pushed.
automatic message-switching center - In a
communications network, location at which messages are
automatically directed according to routing information
within the message.
automatic number identification (ANI) - The number
identifying equipment at local dial offices and sent to
message accounting apparatus; the final four numbers of a
seven-digit phone number.
automatic route selection (ARS) - Device (or
software) which chooses the lowest cost route for
long-distance calls over specific lines or services,
including WATS, leased, specialized non-Bell common carriers
(MCI, Sprint) or direct distance dialing (DDD). Synonym:
Least Cost Routing.
auxiliary equipment - Equipment not under direct
control of the central processing unit. Synonym: ancillary
equipment.
availability - (1) The degree to which a system or
resource is operable and not in a state of congestion or
failure at any given point in time. (2) The percentage of
total trunks in a group which can be accessed by a
particular switch.
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B
background bit error ratio (BBER) - (1) The ratio
of the number of bits in error to the total number of bits
received, exclusive of error bursts, over a special
measurement period. (2) The error performance of the system
under normal operation and does not include error bursts
caused by line switching, maintenance, activity, etc. [An
end-to-end BBER is not specified for digital private line
because of the varying error distribution of access
connection.]
background errors - Errors that occur during the
normal operation of the system. They generally occur one at
a time or a few at a time.
backup - The provision, logical or physical, of
facilities to speed the process of restart and recovery
following failure. Facilities may include duplicated files
of transactions, periodic dumping of core or backing storage
contents, duplicated processors, storage devices, terminals,
telecommunications hardware or the switches to effect a
changeover.
band - (1) The range of frequencies between two
defined limits. (2) In reference to WATS, one of the six
specific geographic service areas as defined by Sprint.
bandwidth - (1) The difference between the top and
bottom limiting frequencies of a continuous frequency band.
(2) Indicates the information-carrying capacity of a
channel. Analog transmission usually expressed in kHz or
MHz; digital transmission, bps, Mbps. Fiber-optic bandwidth
is usually given as its capacity to transmit information in
a specific time period for a specific length. (e.g. 10
Mbps/KM.) (3) Expressed in different measurements depending
on transmission type.
bar-code scanner - (1) Optical character reader. A
device used to read bar-codes by means of reflected light,
such as the scanners that read the Universal Product Codes
on supermarket products.
basic telecommunications access method (BTAM) - An
access method that permits read/write communications with
remote devices.
baud - (1) A unit of signaling speed. (2) A unit
of data transmission speed measured in bits per second. [The
speed in baud is the number of discreet conditions or signal
elements per second. If each event represents only one bit
condition, then baud is the same as bits per second.]
baud rate - A measure of signaling speed in data
communications that specifies the maximum number of signal
elements transmitted each second. [Over dial-up telephone
lines, 300 and 1200 baud are most common. For most purposes,
at slow speeds, a baud rate is the same as the speed in bits
per second. Baud rate is the same as bit rate if all bits
have the same length.]
Bell Operating Company (BOC) - Any of the 22 local
Bell telephone companies owned by AT&T before divestiture.
The independent BOCs provide primary access to Sprint and
other interexchange carriers. See RBOC.
BETA test - The stage at which a new product is
tested under actual usage conditions. The purpose of beta
testing is to locate and correct potential problems before
consumer marketing begins. Follows Alpha Testing.
bid - (1) An attempt to gain control over a line
in order to transmit data. (2) Usually associated with
contention style of sharing a single line among several
terminals. [Non-uniform time-outs at each terminal for
reinstituting a bid if the line is busy give assurance that
each terminal can have access to the line.]
billing contact - Departmental Staff who will
receive billing information
billing cycle - A recurring period of time between
traffic cut-off dates which precedes customer billing.
Cycles are typically 30 days.
binary - A number system based upon twos rather
than tens and that uses only two characters, zero (0) and
one (1).
binary digit - Unit of information in two-level
digital notation which may be 0 or 1. A member selected from
a binary set.
binary synchronous transmission (BSC or bisync) -
(1) Data transmission in which synchronization of characters
is controlled by timing signals generated at the sending and
receiving stations. (2) A half-duplex, character-oriented
data communications protocol. Contrast with asynchronous
transmission.
bipolar - Literally, having two poles. An input
signal is bipolar when one electrical voltage polarity
represents a logically true input and its opposite polarity
represents a logically false input. Contrast with unipolar.
bit - (1) The smallest unit of coded information.
(2) A pulse whose presence or absence indicates data.
Abbreviation for binary digit.
bit duration - (1) Equivalent to the time that it
takes one encoded bit to pass a point on the transmission
medium. (2) In serial communications, a relative unit of
time measurement used for comparison of delay times where
the data rate of a transmission channel can vary (for
example propagation delay, access latency).
bit rate or bandwith - The rate at which bits
(binary digits) are transmitted over a communications path.
Normally expressed in bits per second (bps). [The bit rate
is not to be confused with the data signaling rate which
measures the rate of signal elements being transmitted.]
bit transfer rate - The number of bits transferred
per unit time, usually expressed in bits per second (bps).
bit-oriented - Describes a communications protocol
or transmission procedure where control information is
encoded in fields of one or more bits; oriented toward
full-duplex link operation.
bit map - A matrix of dots, all of the same
density, that form an image.
bits per second (bps) - The rate at which data
transmission (binary digits) is measured. See bit rate.
black box - A generic term used to identify
functional equipment segments, as opposed to circuitry, that
make up each segment of a telecommunications system.
block - A string of records, words or characters
treated as a logical entity. Blocks are separated by
interblock gaps, and each block may contain one or more
records.
block error rate test (BLERT) - (1) In data
communications testing, the ratio between the total number
of blocks transmitted in a given message and the number of
blocks in that message received in error. (2) A measure of
the quality of a data transmission.
block length - A measure of the size of a block,
usually specified in units such as records, words, computer
words or characters.
blocked calls - All attempted calls that are not
connected. Two most common reasons for non-connections: all
lines to the central offices are in use; all connecting
paths through the PBX/switch are in use.
blocking - (1) Engineering principle involving
average time a user will wait while a call searches for the
most economical route; opposed to queuing where a call waits
for the most economical route. (2) Inability to establish a
new call because of the inaccessibility of facilities in the
system being called. Measured under grade of service using
"P" factor.
booting - Technique for loading a program into a
computer's memory in which the program's initial
instructions direct the loading of the rest of the program.
Usually, a few manual instructions must be entered on a
keyboard, or a switch implemented to initiate the process.
bootstrap loader - An input routine in which
simple preset computer operations are used to load
instructions that in turn cause further instructions to be
loaded until the complete computer program is in storage.
[The term refers to the system "pulling itself up by its
bootstraps."]
break - (1) To interrupt the sending of a message
and take control of the circuit at the receiving end. (2) An
interruption in continuity.
breakout box - A device that allows access to
individual points on a physical interface connector for
testing and monitoring.
breakout panel - A breakout box mounted as a
component in some larger device.
bridge, bridging - Equipment and techniques used
to match circuits to each other ensuring minimum
transmission impairment. [Bridging is normally required on
multipoint data channels were several local loops or
channels are interconnected.]
broadband - (1) A transmission facility having a
bandwidth of greater than 20 kHz and, therefore, capable of
higher-speed data transmission. (2) Analog transmission
technique used with data and video transmissions that
provides multiple channels for users through frequency
division multiplexing.
broadcast - Transmission to a number of receiving
locations simultaneously. [Normally associated with a
multidrop line, where a number of terminals share the line]
buckets - (1) In Sprint billing software, an
electronic file or folder in which records are kept until
invoice processing occurs. (See Suspense File.) (2) In data,
a storage unit.
buffer - (1) A high-speed area of storage that is
temporarily reserved for use in performing the input/output
operation into which data is read or from which data is
written. (2) Used to accumulate data into blocks of
sufficient size to be handled efficiently by a processor or
terminal. Synonym: I/O area.
bug - (1) A mistake or malfunction. (2) A program
defect or error. [In 1946 Grace Hopper detected a problem
with an Eniac computer at the University of Pennsylvania.
Investigation uncovered an insect lodged within the computer
causing the malfunction. Hopper's exclamation, "There's a
bug in the computer," coined a new word for computer error.]
building distribution frame (BDF) - The location
in a building where equipment attaches a number of cables
from the LDF's
bulletin board - An electronic message center
accessible through computer-aided communication lines.
burst - A sequence of signals in data
communications counted as one unit in accordance with some
specific criterion or measure.
burst errors - Bits or signals lost due to such
problems as line switching or multiplex switching.
[Typically involves a few thousand errors or lost bits at a
time.]
bus - (1) A heavy conductor, or group of
conductors, to which several units of the same type of
equipment may be connected. (2) A path or channel for
transmitting electrical signals and data, usually between a
computer and peripheral equipment.
busy - Call condition in which transmission
facilities are already in use. Synonym: off-hook condition.
busy hour - (1) The peak 60 minutes during a
business day when the largest volume of communications
traffic is handled. (2) When phone lines are most in demand
and/or most used.
busy tone - A single tone that is interrupted at
60 ipm (impulses per minute) rate to indicate that the
call's terminating location is already in use.
byte - (1) The representation of a character. (2)
A group of eight bits makes a byte. Typically a 16-bit
"word" is itself divided into two bytes for handling. (3)
Unit of measurement used to rate storage capacity of disks;
usually the smallest addressable unit of information in a
data store or memory. One thousand bytes is a kilobyte; one
million bytes is a megabyte.
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C
C band - A portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
used heavily for satellite and microwave transmission;
frequencies of approximately 4 to 6 GHz.
cache memory - A high-speed, buffer-type memory
filled at medium speed from the main memory. [Programs and
instructions found in the cache memory can be operated at
higher speeds without the necessity of loading another
segment.]
call-by-call selection - The ability to switch
calls to individual trunks, rather than trunk groups, and to
transmit necessary information to the specific trunk-type
necessary to complete the call. [ISDN feature with Sprint.]
call detail record (CDR) - Computer record
containing data unique to a specific call. [This information
is processed as a unit and contains such details as
originating switch, terminating switch, call length and time
of day.] (2) Processing of call-specific information --
start time, elapsed time, number dialed, date, and other
pertinent customer data -- to provide call detail reports
and invoices.
call forward/with reason display - Enables the
called number, during an internodal call, to forward the
incoming call to an alternate destination and provide a
message explaining why the call is being forwarded.
calling name delivery - Provides the ability
during call setup to deliver the name of the calling party
from the originating to the terminating switch or the name
of the connected party from the terminating to originating
switch. [ISDN feature with Sprint]
camp (or camp-on) - A PBX feature where a
telephone line is busy and the incoming call is placed in a
waiting mode until the line is available, at which time the
call is automatically put through.
canned program - A software program written to
meet the expected customer needs of a certain application.
Opposite of custom programs.
capability - Data processing equipment
characteristic by which one machine may accept and process
data without conversion or code modification.
carrier - (1) A company authorized by appropriate
regulatory agencies to provide communications services. (2)
A continuous frequency capable of being modulated or
impressed with a second information carrying signal.
carrier modulation - A signal at some fixed
amplitude and frequency which is combined with an
information bearing signal in the modulation process to
produce and output a signal suitable for transmission.
carrier system - A method for providing several
communications channels over a single path. Accomplished by
modulating the data, voice or video transmissions onto a
higher frequency carrier wave, then recovering it at the
receiving end through a process of demodulation (See
Frequency Division Multiplexing.)
categories of service - Basic and enhanced, as
defined by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
[Basic service refers to transmission capacity for the
movement of information; for example residential telephone
service. Enhanced service combines basic service with
computer processing; for example Electronic Yellow Pages.]
cathode ray tube (CRT) - A vacuum tube display in
which a beam of electrons can be controlled to form
alphanumeric characters or symbols on a luminescent screen,
for example, by use of a dot matrix.
cellular mobile radio - A radio-based system
providing exchange telephone service to a station located in
an auto or other mobile vehicle or device (for example
briefcase). [Radio circuits transmitted to/from a base radio
station cover a specific geographical area. As the vehicle
or device moves from one area to another, different base
radio stations handle the call.]
central office (CO) - (1) Location of telephone
switching equipment where customers' lines are terminated
and interconnected. (2) Switching center that provides local
access to the public network. Sometimes referred to as: End
Office, Local Dial Office, Wire Center or Switching Center.
CENTREX - A type of private branch exchange
service where incoming calls may be dialed direct to
extensions without operator assistance. Outgoing and
intercom calls may be dialed by extension users.
CENTREX, CO - Arrangement in which the Local
Exchange Company's service-providing switch is located in
its central office.
CENTREX, CU - Arrangement in which the PBX
features are provided by a switching system located on the
customer's premises, but work under the control of, or in
conjunction with, equipment located in a LEC central office.
channel - (1) The smallest subdivision of a
transmission system by means of which a single type of
communication service is provided, for example, a voice
channel or a data channel. (2) A communications path via a
carrier or microwave radio. (3) In data communications, a
path for electrical transmission between two or more points.
(4) Within a computer, the electronic paths along which data
flows between the input-output units of a computer and the
customer premises equipment (CPU). Synonym: circuit,
facility, line, link or path.
channel bank - (1) A part of the carrier system
that performs the first step of modulation. (2) A
multiplexer that modulates a group of channels into a higher
frequency band and, conversely, demultiplexes the higher
frequency band into individual channels. It can break a
signal into the equivalent of 24 analog voice grade and/or
56 Kbps digital channels.
channel capacity - The maximum bit rate that can
be handled by a channel.
channel mileage charge - Monthly leased rate for
circuits between telephone company (telco) central offices.
channel service unit (CSU) - Premises equipment
that complies with Bell Technical Publication 62411 in
providing loopback, keep-alive signals, alarm and status
conditions.
channel termination charge - Fee associated with a
T1 for the circuits feeding into a telco central office.
channel, four-wire - A two-way circuit, each with
backup, where the signals simultaneously follow separate and
distinct paths in opposite directions in the transmission
medium.
character - (1) Any alphabetical letter, digit or
special symbol. (2) In data transmission, the representation
of a letter number or symbol by a specific code made up of
binary digits.
character-oriented - A communications protocol or
transmission procedure that carries control information
encoded in fields of one or more bytes.
chips - Miniaturized microprocessors built on a
single piece of silicon. [Typically, less than 1/2-inch
square, they contain all the essential elements of a central
processor, including the control logic, instruction decoding
and arithmetic processing circuitry. Microprocessor chips
are combined with memory and I/O integrated circuit chips to
form a microcomputer, which usually fill no more than a
single printed circuit board.]
circuit - A path for the transmission of
electromagnetic signals; includes all conditioning and
signaling equipment. Synonym: facility.
circuit grade - (1) The information-carrying
capability of a circuit, delineated in speed or signal type.
(2) For data use, capability within certain speed ranges.
circuit switching - (1) A method of
communications, where an electrical connection between
calling and called stations is established on demand for
exclusive use of the circuit until the connection is
released. (2) A switching system that completes a dedicated
transmission path from sender to receiver at the time of
transmission. See also: packet switching, store and forward,
message switching.
class of service (COS) - (1) Telephone service
distinctions which include: rate differences between
individual and party lines, flat rate and message rate, and
restricted and extended area service. (2) A subgrouping of
telephone customers or users for the sake of rate
distinction or limitation of service.
clock - A repetitive signaling device used to
control a synchronous computer.
cluster controller - A device that handles the
remote communications processing for multiple terminals or
workstations.
coaxial cable - Cable consisting of an outer
conductor surrounding an inner conductor, separated from
each other by insulating material. It can carry a much
higher bandwidth than a wire pair.
CODEC - Equipment containing a coder plus a
decoder. Used to convert analog signals to digital form for
transmission over a digital medium and back again to the
original analog form.
cold boot - (1) First software initialization of
the computer. (2) Software loading and checking just after
the computer has been turned on.
collision domain - In some network technologies,
such as Ethernet, "collisions" of packets are possible. A
collision domain is a group of machines on a network whose
packets may collide with each other. Routers and switches
break up collision domains and potentially increase
performance.
color graphics adapter (CGA) - Equipment which
provides 200 vertical x 600 horizontal pixel resolution for
digital (rather than analog) video signals.
column - Vertical arrangement of characters.
common carrier - Government-regulated, private
company that furnishes the general public with
telecommunications services and facilities; for example, a
telephone or telegraph company.
common channel interoffice signaling (CCIS) - A
method in which labeled messages convey signaling and call
completion information over a single circuit, leaving other
circuits free for voice, data or video transmissions.
Example: Signaling System 7.
common control switching arrangement (CCSA) -
Network service that directs inward and outward dialing
typically with a seven-digit code. Originally designed as a
feature for private networks. Now seen in virtual switched
private line networks.
common control switching 7 (CCS7) - A digital
communications channel dedicated for the processing of
signaling and call setup information between processors in
the switched network. (2) An international standard for
network signaling via data links operating at 56 kbps.
Synonym: Signaling System 7.
common intermediate format (CIF) - The type of
coded video frame transmitted when using CCITT
recommendation H.261 coding methods. CIF is 30 frames per
second, 325H x 288V pixels.
communication - Transmission of intelligence
between two points (origin and reception) without alteration
of sequence or structure of the information content. See
also data communication.
communications outlet - The end location point for
attachment of communication devices. It is typically a
faceplate mounted on a wall with one or more jacks.
Communications Satellite Corporation (COMSAT) - A
United States company created by an act of Congress in 1962
to provide communications via satellites. COMSAT leases
satellite circuits to many American companies and is active
in international communications through partial ownership in
the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization
(INTELSAT) and the International Maritime Satellite
Organization (INMARSAT).
communications terminal - Any device which
generates or receives electrical or tone signals that can be
transmitted over a communications channel.
component video signal - Transmission in which the
red (R), green (G) and blue (B) picture components are
present as individual bits of information. [Synchronization
information may be included with the G signal or be
separate.]
composite video signal - Transmission
incorporating luminance, color and synchronizing
information.
compression - Techniques to reduce the number of
bits required to represent information in data transmission
or storage, thereby conserving bandwidth and/or memory. (2)
Application technique.
continuous presence - A video processing,
transmission and display mode that involves combining parts
of two separate video images for transmission in a single
data stream.
CompuServe - An information retrieval service
which operates primarily in a videotex-like mode but also
allows for standardized time-sharing as well as
bibliographic and numeric retrieval. See: videotex
computer - A device capable of solving problems or
manipulating data by accepting data, performing prescribed
operations on the data and supplying the results of these
operations. Various types of computers are: analog computer,
digital computer, calculator.
computer-aided design (CAD) - Automation of the
performance of various operations according to graphic
design specifications through the use of a special computer
and peripherals.
computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) - Automation of
the performance of various operations according to
manufacturing specifications through the use of a special
computer and peripherals.
computer-assisted instruction (CAI) - An
application in which a stand-alone personal computer or
system is used to teach. Applications usually involve a
dialog between students and software programs which inform
students of their mistakes in a real-time manner.
computer science - The study of computer hardware
and software.
concatenation - (1) To unite in a series; to link
together; to chain. (2) The linking of transmission channels
(phone lines, coaxial cable, optical fiber) end-to-end.
conditioning - (1) To bring to a standard. (2)
Addition of equipment to voice grade lines to provide for
data transmissions at specified minimum values of line
characteristics, in ranges from C1 to C4 (the best). [Common
carriers often recommend no conditioning for lines
transmitting at 1200 baud; C1 for 2400 baud, C2 for 4800
baud and C4 for speeds above 4800 baud.]
conduit - Tubing, usually metal, through which
cable is run, providing wiring for activation of voice and
data lines.
conference call - A connection established among
three or more stations in such a manner that each of the
stations is able to communicate with all the others.
configuration - The interconnection and
programming of independent machines or equipment to operate
as a system.
contention - Condition on a communications channel
or in a peripheral device when two or more stations try to
either transmit at the same time or access a resource
simultaneously.
control unit (CU) - Central processor of a
telephone switching device.
Consultative Committee on International Telegraph and
Telephone (CCITT) - An internationally recognized
advisory group that recommends worldwide standards for
common-carrier communications services.
conversational mode - Operation of a data
processing system in which a sequence of alternating entries
between a user and the system takes place in a manner
comparable to a conversation between two persons.
counter - Device which tallies the number of
occurrences of an event (example, a cash register) .
country code - A one-, two- or three-digit number
used for international dialing. [The first digit is always
the world-zone number. Subsequent digits further define the
geographic area.]
crosstalk - Transmission noise caused by energy
"leaking" from one channel to another on the same facility.
[In analog voice communications, crosstalk makes
conversation on one circuit accidentally audible on
another.]
current loop - Transmission technique that
recognizes current flows, rather than voltage levels.
[Traditionally used in teletypewriter networks,
incorporating batteries as the transmission power source.]
cursor - Position indicator frequently employed in
terminals or workstations to indicate where a character is
to be corrected or data is to be entered.
customer owned and maintained (COAM) - User
provided and serviced communications equipment and its
associated wiring.
customer premises equipment (CPE) - All
telecommunications equipment (except pay phones) and,
usually, wiring that is located at the users building.
customer service team - A team of IT
Communications Services staff who provide service to a
particular U-M department. The team includes a CRM, Analyst,
Engineer, etc.
cut - (1) Transfer of a service from one facility
to another. (2) Process of moving from a test environment
into full production. (3) Implementation of a system in a
continuous, time bound manner.
cut through - Establish a complete path for
signaling and/or audio communications.
cyclic redundancy check - Error detection
technique. [Using a polynomial, a series of two eight-bit
block check characters are generated that represent the
entire block of data. The block check characters are
incorporated into the transmission frame, then checked at
the receiving end.]
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D
D4 framing format - (1) Division of DS1-level circuit
into 24 equal channels. [Each channel carrier digitizes
voice and signaling information in eight-bit bytes. A D4
frame consists of 192 (8 X 24) information bits. In
addition, to identify each of the 24 channels, a framing bit
is added in the 193rd position. Each byte is updated 8,000
times per second. Thus, the transmission speed of a DS1
circuit is 1,544,000 Hz (193 X 8,000).] (2) Monitors the DS1
signals for either framing errors or bipolar violations
(BPVs). BPVs are eliminated when the bit stream passes
through interfaces such as a multiplexer, Automatic
Protection Switch or the Digital Cross-Connect System (DCS).
Since no end-to-end performance monitoring is available
using BPVs, the line must be taken out of service to test
for large errors.
daisy chain - Connection of multiple devices in a
serial fashion. [An advantage of daisy chaining is a savings
in transmission facilities. The disadvantage is that if a
device malfunctions, all other devices daisy-chained behind
it are disabled.]
data - (1) Units of information. (2) Any
representation, such as characters or analog quantities, to
which meaning is or may be assigned.
data above voice (DAV) - Transmission system which
carries digital data on a portion of the microwave radio
spectrum above the frequency used for voice transmission.
data access arrangement (DAA) - Communication
equipment furnished by a common carrier that allows
attachment of privately owned data transmission equipment
(DTE) to the common carrier network.
data communications - (1) Transfer of information
between a source and a destination via one or more data
links, according to appropriate protocols. (2) Transmission
and reception of data, often including operations such as
coding, decoding and validation.
data conversion - Process of changing information
from one form of representation to another.
data coupler - A device to connect customer-owned
modems or data sets to the regular telephone network. It
functions by limiting the power applied to the line and
providing network control and signaling.
data encryption standard (DES) - A cryptographic
algorithm designed by the National Bureau of Standards to
encipher and decipher data using a 64-bit key.
data pbx - A digital switch that allows a user on
an attached circuit to select from other circuits, usually
one at a time and on a contention basis, for the purpose of
establishing a through connection. [A data PBX is
distinguished from a PBX in that only digital transmission,
and not analog, is supported.]
database - An organized compilation of
computerized bits. [Formalized rules exist for the
establishment, control and access of a database.]
datalink control - Second layer in the
International Standards Organization reference model for
Open Systems Interconnection (OSI). Synonym: protocol.
Datapac Network - A common user, packet-switched
data network provided by The Computer Communications Group
of the Trans Canada Telephone System.
dataphone - (1) A generic term to describe a
family of devices to facilitate data communication. (2) An
AT&T designation for a service which provides data
communication over telephone facilities.
dataphone digital service (DDS) - A communications
service of the Bell System in which data is transmitted in
digital rather than analog form, thus eliminating the need
for modems. See acronym list for other uses of DDS.
data terminal equipment (DTE) - (1) Provides for
the communications control function (protocol). (2) Any
piece of equipment at which a communications path begins or
ends.
deadlock - Unresolved contention for the use of a
resource.
debug - Checking the logic of a program to isolate
and eliminate the mistakes from a computer program or other
software. Synonym: troubleshoot.
decibel (dB) - (1) A unit of measure represented
as a ratio of two voltages, currents or powers. (2)
Measurement of transmission loss or gain.
decision table - (1) A matrix of contingency plans
with the actions to be taken. [Sometimes used in place of
flowcharts for program documentation.]
dedicated access line (DAL) - A non-switched
circuit or path connecting the customer's telephone
equipment to the Sprint switch with no intermediate
switching functions by the Local Exchange Company (LEC).
[Customers with DALs access the Sprint network directly and
can use rotary or DTMF signals.]
dedicated line - A permanently assigned path to
specific data terminals which is not part of a switched
network. Synonym: private line.
delay dial - A switching configuration whereby
local equipment will wait until it receives the entire
telephone number before seizing a circuit to transmit the
call.
delay distortion - Noise or echo resulting from
the non-uniform speeds of various signal components of
transmissions through a transmission medium(s).
demodulation - Conversion of a signal from either
digital or analog to its original form. Antonym: modulation.
denial - Call condition that occurs when no
circuits are available and a busy tone is returned to the
calling party. [This situation is distinctly different from
delay in that denial is not time-related and can only be
measured in terms of the percentage of calls denied.] See
blocking.
deregulation - (1) A 1983 Federal Communications
Commission ruling which freed Sprint and other interexchange
carriers from the need to file rate changes or seek
authority from FCC to expand. AT&T was not deregulated
because of its economic power and market dominance.
DHCP - Stands for "Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol". This protocol is based on BOOTP and BOOTP clients
can still connect to a DHCP server. DHCP allows for dynamic
allocation of network addresses and configurations to newly
attached hosts, as well as recovery and reallocation of
network addresses through a leasing mechanism. Rather than
an administrator visiting each computer on a network and
entering configuration data (IP address, default router,
network mask, DNS server, NTP [Network Time Protocol]
server, etc.), all computers are configured the same - to
use DHCP. When the computers boot, they receive all of this
configuration information from the DHCP server. If
configuration information needs to change it can be edited
in one place, the database, and each affected computer will
receive the update. (For a DHCP FAQ see
http://web.syr.edu/~jmwobus/comfaqs/dhcp.faq.html)
diagnostic - Means of detection, discovery and
further isolation of an equipment malfunction or a
processing error.
dial access - (1) Connection through the public
switched telephone network. (2) Means of providing a
terminal switched access to a service, network or computer.
dial exchange - An automated switching junction or
central office. For example, a PBX permitting call placement
by rotary or pushbutton dialing rather than by an operator.
dial level - The selection of stations or services
associated with a PBX using a one- to four-digit code (for
example, dialing nine for access to outside dial tone).
dial pulse - A short duration, direct-current
signal produced by or simulated to emulate the opening and
closing of contacts in a rotary telephone dial when dialing
numbers. Dial pulses control the action of telephone
switching equipment. Also called rotary dialing.
dial repeating tie line/dial repeating tie trunk -
A private line communications arrangement which links two or
more points together and permits direct trunk to trunk
connections without use of an attendant.
dial selective signaling - A multipoint network in
which the called party is selected by a prearranged dialing
code.
dial tone - An audible signal indicating that
automatic switching equipment is ready to receive signals
required for a connection.
dial-up - Use of a rotary or dual tone
multi-frequency (DTMF) telephone to initiate a
station-to-station telephone call over the public switched
network.
dial-up line - (1) A communications circuit that
is established by a switched circuit connection. (2) Any
circuit available over the public switched network.
dialing plan - A description of the telephone
number assignments for customer use on a telecommunications
network.
digg - A is a social news website made for people
to discover and share content from anywhere on the Internet,
by submitting links and stories, and voting and commenting
on submitted links and stories. Voting stories up and down
is the site's cornerstone function, respectively called
digging and burying. Many stories get submitted every day,
but only the most dugg stories appear on the front page.
digg's popularity has prompted the creation of other social
networking sites with story submission and voting systems. digital multiplex system (DMS) - A means of
utilizing technologies that provide digital switched service
for voice and data transmission. [DMS is characterized by
the use of pulse code modulation (PCM) and time division
multiplexing (TDM) throughout the switched network. It
allows the direct switching of PCM signals used in
transmission systems without their conversion to analog
format.]
digital signal (DS) - (1) A nominally
discontinuous electrical signal that changes from one state
to another in discreet steps. (2) A signal that is time-wise
discontinuous (i.e., discreet) and can assume a limited set
of values. Antonym: analog.
digital signal hierarchy - A series of
standardized increments for multiplexing of digital channels
in T-carriers an other types of carrier systems for digital
transmissions. The North American DS hierarchy is structured
differently in other global regions.
ds0 - Digital Signal level zero. One 64 kbps
capacity path, equivalent to one voice (analog) circuit.
ds1 - Digital Signal level one. One 1.544 Mbps
digital signal comprised of 24 voice grade lines, each with
64 Kbps capacity. (See T1)
ds1c - One 3.152 Mbps pipe, equivalent to 48 voice
grade lines, each with 64 Kbps capacity.
ds1 drop and insert arrangement - DS0-level
channels are connected to and terminated at intermediate
points between the originating and terminating locations
within a network.
ds1 fan-out arrangement - DS0-level circuits are
routed to several different locations from the single DS1
termination.
ds1 private line - An 1.544 Mbps leased, owned or
otherwise dedicated circuit available through the LECs
interexchange carrier (POP-to-POP or interLATA) or alternate
carriers. Sprint product: CLEARLINE 1.5
ds2 - Digital signal level two. One 6.312 Mbps
channel, equivalent to 96 voice grade lines, each with 64
Kbps capacity.
ds3 - Digital signal level three. One 44.736 Mbps
channel, equivalent to 672 voice grade lines, each with 64
Kbps capacity.
ds4 - Digital signal level four. One 375.176 Mbps
channel, equivalent to 4,032 voice grade lines, each with 64
Kbps capacity. Typically used in interoffice transmissions.
digital technology - Method of storing, processing
and transmitting information through the use of electronic
or optical pulses that represent binary digits or bits (0
and 1).
digital transmission system - A transmission
system in which information is transmitted in a series of
pulses, and in which the signal can be regenerated. See also
pulse modulation and time division multiplexing.
digitizer - Device used to convert an image to a
series of dots that can be read, stored and manipulated by
the computer. [A digitizer often scans video input, while a
scanner usually scans hard copy input.]
diode - A two-electrode electron tube or its
semiconductor equivalent. [Usually employed as liquid
crystal diodes (LCD) or light emitting diodes (LED) and are
especially applicable to portable computers.]
direct call - A facility which avoids the use of
address selection signals or typed dialing sequences. The
network interprets the off-hook status or call request
signal as an instruction to establish a connection with a
single destination address previously designated by the
user.
direct distance dialing (DDD) - A toll service
that permits customers to place their own long distance
calls without the aid of an operator.
direct inward dialing (DID) - A PBX or CENTREX
feature in which incoming calls are completed to extensions
without the assistance of an operator.
direct mail - Any type of advertisement, brochure
or printed piece delivered to a targeted audience, usually
through the postal service.
direct outward dialing - A PBX or CENTREX feature
that allows a station user to gain access to the public
switched network without the assistance of an operator.
direct response - Refers to direct mail and
telemarketing campaigns.
discrete - Pertains to separate and distinct parts
of data such as holes in a card or graphic characters.
discrete cosine transform - An audio coding
algorithm.
disk - (1) A magnetic recording medium. (2) A
magnetically coated platter that stores programs and data
files. [The two main types of disks are hard disks and
floppy disks.]
disk operating system (DOS) - The software that
provides instructions for system hardware operation and data
processing.
distortion - (1) Any change from the original wave
form or signal. (2) Normally, non-predictable changes which
interfere with interpretation of the result.
distributed data processing (DDP) - Use of
computer systems or intelligent terminals at multiple sites
within an organization to perform data processing and/or
storage functions.
distributed systems - Arrangements wherein an
organization's computer complex has many separate computing
facilities interfaced and working in a cooperative manner.
DNS - Stands for "Domain Name System". This
service maps an internet domain name to an IP address and
visa versa. ITCom already runs a production DNS service. By
integrating this service into this project a synergy can be
achieved. Most DHCP/DNS systems require manual configuration
of the associated data. This project plans to automate much
of this process. A new computer is plugged into the network.
The user authenticates and DHCP and DNS servers are
automatically configured with the appropriate data. (For
general DNS information see
http://www.dms.csiro.au/~marka/dns.html)
down time - Period during which a computer,
communications line or other device is not operating
correctly because of mechanical or electronic failure. (As
opposed to available time, idle time or stand-by time.)
download - (1) Transferring files from one
computer to another. (2) Loading fonts from a computer to a
printer.
downstream - The latter stages of processing in a
computer program or system.
drop - (1) The portion of an outside telephone
plant which extends from the telephone distribution cable to
the subscriber's premises. (2) A connection point for a
terminal on a line.
dry circuit - A circuit which transmits voice
signals and carries no direct current.
dual tone multifrequency (DTMF) - Type of
signaling which emits two distinct frequencies for each
indicated digit. Synonym: push button dialing, touch tone
dialing
dumb terminal - (1) Conversational display
terminal with limited resident intelligence. (2) Terminal
capable of receiving and transmitting data from a host
computer over a communications network.
duplex - (1) Two units in one. (2) Simultaneous
two-way independent transmission. Synonym: full duplex.
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E
E & M signaling - Method of receiving and
transmitting signals. (Originally stood for ear and mouth).
External Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
(EBCDIC) - A transmission system used by several IBM and
IBM-compatible data terminals which consists of eight data
bits, each of which represents a particular number, letter
or character.
echo - A distortion that occurs when a signal is
reflected or otherwise returned (on the same wire on which
the speaker is speaking) with sufficient magnitude and delay
as to be perceived by the speaker. [Typically, a problem on
satellite circuits.]
echoplex - A method of checking and compensating
for echos in network terminals that are operating in the
two-way simultaneous mode.
edit - (1) To prepare data for a later operation.
(2) Functions such as the rearrangement or the addition of
data, the deletion of unwanted data, format control, code
conversion and the application of standard processes such as
zero suppression.
electronic key telephone set (EKTS) - Any key
telephone with a built-in microprocessor which allows access
to PBX-like features as well as access to multiple CO lines
and uses two- to four-pair wiring.
electronic mail - (1) The electronic transmission
of letters, messages and memos from one computer to another.
(2) A computer-aided method of communication where an
individual sends an on-line message to another individual
via dial-up or dedicated access. See Bulletin Board.
electronic switching system (ESS) - Electronic
versus electromechanical switching equipment.
electronic tandem network (ETN) - (1) A private
network in which the network switch functions as a PBX and
automatically connects the calling office to the called
office through tandem-tie trunks.
emulate - (1) To imitate another system. (2) A
method by which an imitating system can accept the same
data, execute the same computer programs and achieve the
same results as the original system.
enable - (1) To prepare a circuit for operation.
(2) To allow an item to function.
encoding - (1) Inscribing or imprinting Magnetic
Ink Character Recognition (MICR) characters on checks,
deposits and other documents to be processed by a MICR
reader. (2) The introduction of data on a medium such as a
magnetic strip on plastic cards.
encryption - Conversion of data into code form for
security purposes during transmission and decoding at the
receiving end.
end office (EO) - A switching center where
subscriber lines are terminated and where toll calls are
switched through to the terminating destination.
enterprise number - (1) A unique telephone
exchange number that permits the terminating party to be
automatically billed for incoming calls. (2) A toll-free
number.
epitophier - A small piece of plastic located
below each jack on a communications outlet. The color of the
plastic indicates the type of service that may be provided
on the jack.
equal access (EA) - (1) The concept -- enforced by
the 1984 Modified Final Judgement (MFJ) -- that all
Interexchange Carriers (IXC) must have the same access to
the local BOC facilities as AT&T enjoys; provided as Feature
Group D interconnection. (2) The arrangement whereby the
BOCs provide trunk side connections to an End Office (EO),
Automatic Number Identification (ANI), answer supervision,
dial pulse or DTMF signal recognition. [Customers may
subscribe to the IXC of their choice.]
equalization - (1) Procedure to compensate for
fluctuation in circuit amplitude, delay or distortion and to
produce a flat frequency response rate. (2) In data
communications, a compensation for the increase of
attenuation within frequency.
ergonomics - A discipline that promotes the
consideration of human factors in the design of a working
environment and its components (heat, light, sound,
equipment).
erlang - (1) A unit of traffic intensity. (2) One
erlang is the intensity at which one traffic path would be
continually occupied.
error - (1) A difference between a computer value
and the theoretically correct value. (2) A malfunction that
is not reproducible. (3) In data communications, any
unwanted change in the original contents of a transmission.
error burst - Results of an event that causes a
lengthy stream of consecutively transmitted bits to be
defective. [Retransmission is the normal correction
procedure in the event of an error burst.]
error rate - Ratio of the number of signal
elements (or data) incorrectly received to the total number
transmitted. (2) The probability of an error occurring
during the transmission of a message.
error-free seconds (EFS) - Ratio of the number of
seconds in which there are no bits in error to the total
number of seconds in the measurement interval.
errored second (ES) - A one-second interval
containing one or more errors. [Its reciprocal, Error Free
Second (EFS), is the more commonly used term.]
Ethernet - A packet-switched data local area
network (LAN) design by Xerox Corp. which employs CSMA-CD as
access control mechanism.
exchange (EX) - (1) A room or building equipped so
that telephone lines terminating there may be interconnected
as required. The equipment may include manual or automatic
switching equipment. (2) A telephone switching center; an
aggregate of traffic-carrying devices, switching stages,
controlling and signaling means at a network node that
enables subscriber lines and/or other telecommunication
circuits to be interconnected as required by individual
callers. (3) The territory served by an exchange, within
which local service rates apply; also known as the exchange
area or local service area.
extended superframe format (ESF) - Use of the
Cyclical Redundancy Check-6 (CRC-6) Code to measure actual
logic errors rather than format errors. [ESF permits circuit
performance to be measured in-service and real-time,
regardless of the electrical/physical characteristics of the
transmission facility and network. Error data processed and
stored in the ESF CPU is available on demand for the last 24
hours in 15-minute intervals, making it possible to
sectionalize problems.]
extract - A data synopsis from a given system
which is passed to another system to complete processing.
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F
facility - A transmission path between two or more
locations without terminating or signaling equipment.
[Addition of terminating equipment would produce either a
channel, a central office line or a trunk. Various types of
signaling would also be used depending on the application.}
facsimile - (1) A system for the transmission of a
picture, drawing or other document by converting it into
coded electrical signals which are subsequently converted
into a replica of the original image at the receiving end.
(2) The replicated image of picture, drawing or document.
(See fax.)
facsimile transmission - An electronic means for
transferring a precise reproduction.
Family One Service - One of the new definitions of
service level to be provided by IT Communications Services.
ITD will provide a "quick response" to service requests in
this category. This means the service will be provided right
at the point of contact with ITD.
Family Two Service - One of the new definitions of
service level to be provided by IT Communications Services.
ITD will place service requests in this category on a
"fastpath." This means the service will be provided within
five days of the point of contact with ITD.
Family Three Service - One of the new definitions
of service level to be provided by IT Communications
Services. ITD will perform a "coordinated request" for
service requests in this category. This means the service
will require a number of ITD staff to be involved and it
will take a greater amount of time to provide the service.
fault tolerance - The level of ability within a
program or system to operate properly even if errors occur.
fax - (1) Abbreviation for facsimile. (2)
Reference to either the service or the actual machines by
which a copy of a document or picture may be transmitted.
(3) A verb meaning to send an electronic image.
feature groups - The different types and qualities
of public switched network connection between local
telephone companies and long distance companies.
feature group A (FGA) - (1) A service that uses
off-network access lines (ONAL). (2) A level of dial-up
service in which subscribers have to dial a full local
subscriber number to connect to the IXC, then have to key
out (using DTMF) their personal authorization code followed
by the distant number required.
feature group B (FGB) - (1) A dial-up service that
gives no hardware answer code which means call timing may be
inaccurate. (2) A service that uses off-network access
trunks (ONAT) which eliminate most off-network access line
difficulties and greatly improve transmission quality (for
local offices).
feature group C (FGC) - (1) A dial-up service that
uses off-network access trunks which eliminate most
off-network access line difficulties and greatly improve
transmission quality (for local tandem offices).
feature group D (FGD) - (1) A dial-up service
employing a coding method to enable telephone customers to
choose their long distance network and use the same number
of digits whichever carrier chosen. (2) Uses off-network
access trunks (ONAT). See Equal Access.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) -
Government agency established by the Communications Act of
1934 which regulates all interstate communications.
Federal Telecommunications System (FTS) - A
government communications system administered by the General
Services Administration (GSA), covering all 50 states plus
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands; provides services for
voice, teletypewriter, facsimile and data transmission.
feedback - (1) Return of part of the output of a
machine, process or system to the computer as input for
another phase; typically used for surveillance,
self-correcting maintenance or control purposes. (2) Means
of comparing or providing actual performance which can be
compared with planned performance.
fiber optics - (1) A means of providing a
high-speed transmission, using light to send images through
a flexible bundle of glass fibers. (2) The use of light as
the primary medium in an actual application.
fiber-optic transmission system (FOTS) - A means
of sending data by coded light pulses through small diameter
glass fibers. [Information is transferred by modulating the
transmitted light. These modulated signals are detected by
light-sensitive semiconductor devices (photodiodes).]
fiber-optic cable - A bundle of thin filaments of
glass or other transparent materials used as the medium for
transmitting coded light pulses that represent data, images
or sound.
fifo (first in-first out) queuing - Method where
the next item to be retrieved is the item which has been
waiting the longest.
file - (1) An organized, named collection of
records treated as a unit. (2) The storage media on which
these records are kept.
file server - A station or microprocessing
computer dedicated to providing file and mass data storage
services to the other stations on the local network. [Often
found in Local Area Network (LAN) applications.]
firmware - Computer programs that are embodied in
a physical device that can form part of a machine.
[Contrasted with software, which refers to the entire set of
programs, procedures and documentation associated with a
system, specifically computer programs, which are portable
from one machine to another.]
flat rate - (1) Fee for a product or service that
is not dependent on usage. (2) Telephone tariff in which no
charges are levied for local calls. (3) A rental charge
which covers unlimited or equipment usage.
flow control - The procedure for controlling the
rate of transfer of packets between two designated points in
a data network; used to prevent data loss during
transmission.
footprint - (1) That portion of the earth's
surface illuminated by a narrow beam from a satellite. (2)
Floor or work space occupied by a given unit of equipment.
foreign exchange (FX) - A circuit that connects a
subscriber in one exchange with a central office in another
exchange.
foreign exchange line - Line offered by a common
carrier in which the user in one central office is assigned
a telephone number belonging to a remote central office to
minimize long distance charges. [Charges for these lines
vary from carrier to carrier.]
forward channel - Communications path carrying voice
or data from the originating caller to the terminating
destination.
forward error correction - Technique for
regenerating lost data transmissions or errored messages;
retransmission of any information by the transmitter.
[Typically, this is accomplished by adding bits to each
transmitted character or code clock using a predetermined
algorithm. It doesn't need a feedback channel, and therefore
may be used with a one-way transmission system.]
frequency division multiplexing (FDM) - Method of
transmitting two or more signals by dividing the available
transmission frequency into narrower bands and using each as
a separate channel.
frequency modulation (FM) - Transmission method in
which the frequency of the carrier wave is changed to
correspond to changes in the signal wave.
full duplex - See duplex.
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G
G.711 - CCITT recommendation detailing a 74 kbps,
7-kHz bandwidth audio coding algorithm.
G.722 - CCITT recommendation detailing a 32 kbps,
3.4-kHz bandwidth audio coding algorithm.
garbage - Unwanted or meaningless information
being stored in a file or used in a process.
gateway - Conceptual or logical network station
that interconnects two otherwise incompatible networks,
network nodes, subnetworks or devices. Gateways perform
protocol-conversion operations across a wide spectrum of
communications functions or layers.
geosynchronous orbit - Position over the equator
that communication satellites assume; an area about 23,000
miles above the earth's surface where a satellite's velocity
matches the rotation of the earth, causing it to remain
stationary relative to a point on the earth.
gigabyte - One billion or one thousand million
(109) bytes.
garbage in-garbage out (GIGO) - Phrase used to
describe quality of data input and output within a computer
system; specifically, if input data is bad (garbage in) then
the output data will also be bad (garbage out).
glitch - A hardware malfunction. [As opposed to a
software error, called a bug.]
grade of service - (1) A measurement of the
quality of telecommunications related to the availability of
circuits when calls are to be made. Grade of service is
based on the busiest hour of the day. It is measured in
either percentage of calls blocked for dial-up access or
average delay for manual situations. (2) The probability of
a call being blocked by busy trunks; expressed as a decimal
fraction. It usually pertains to the busy-hour probability.
Referred to as the "P" factor.
graphics - (1) Use of the computer for drawing
lines under complete program control. (2) The on-line
attachment of a vector scope and light pen to the computer,
enabling the user and the computer to interact and jointly
draw pictures on the face of the scope.
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H
H.221 - CCITT recommendation regarding frame
structure for audiovisual teleservices.
H.230 - CCITT recommendation regarding
frame-synchronous control and indication signals for
audiovisual systems.
H.242 - CCITT recommendation regarding a system
for establishing communication between audiovisual terminals
using digital channels up to 2 Mbps.
H.261 - CCITT recommendation regarding a video
codec for audiovisual services.
half duplex - Alternating the direction of
transmission of signals between two terminals or computers
but not transmitting in both directions simultaneously.
Contrast with duplex.
handoff - Process by which a cellular radio
telephone call is transferred from one cell site to another.
handset - That portion of the telephone containing
the transmitter and receiver which is designed to be
hand-held when the telephone is in use.
handshake - A preliminary exchange of
predetermined signals performed by modems and/or terminals
and computers to verify that a communications link has been
established and data transmission can proceed.
hardwire - To directly attach or dedicate a cable
or line between units of equipment.
hertz (Hz) - International standard unit of
frequency. [Replaces, and is identical to, the older unit
cycles-per-second.]
heuristic - Pertaining to exploratory methods of
problem solving in which solutions are arrived at by an
interactive, self-learning method.
hierarchical network - (1) A system, in which
processing and control functions are performed at designated
levels by computers specifically designed for those
functions. (2) A switching architecture arranged in classes
of offices with defined levels of responsibility. [Such as
the American Class 1 to Class 5 network or the CCITT
international network.]
hierarchy - The relationship of various accounts or
entities within a multi-level structure.
hit-on-the-line - Description of the errors caused
by external interferences such as impulse noise caused by
lightning.
holding time - The total period a communications
channel or facility is in use for each transmission,
including both message and operating times.
homing - (1) Returning to the starting position,
as in a rotary stepping switch. (2) Fixing a signal on the
originating equipment to determine service quality or
problems.
hookswitch - The device on which the telephone
receiver hangs or rests when not in use.
housekeeping operation - The execution of a
computer program that doesn't directly contribute to a
product or service but is essential to the running of the
system. For example, the initialization of storage areas or
the execution of a calling sequence. Synonym: overhead
operation.
hubbing - Converting analog lines to a digital T1
facility.
hunting - (1) Automatic routing of calls to an
idle circuit in a prearranged group when the circuit called
is busy. (2) The movement of a call as it progresses through
a group of lines. [Typically, the call will try to be
connected on the first line of the group; if that line is
busy it will try the second line and then the third, etc.]
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I
in-band signaling,- (1) A type of transmission
using an alternate current (AC) signal (usually 2,600 Hz)
within the normal voice band. (2) An audible signal
transmitted end-to-end on a long voice circuit without
intermediate signaling equipment; requires that signaling
equipment be arranged for "tone on when idle" operation.
inbound telemarketing - Any incoming sales or service
function in an organization. [Inbound telemarketing is found
in the following departments: customer service, order entry,
reservation sales, technical hotlines or sales support.]
infrared - Pertaining to the frequency range in
the electromagnetic spectrum that is higher than radio
frequencies but below the range of visible light.
initialize - To set counters, switches, addresses
or contents of storage to zero or another starting value at
the beginning of or at prescribed points in the operation of
a computer routine.
input/output (I/O channel) - 1) A general term for
equipment used to communicate with a computer. (2) The
process of transmitting information from an external source
to the computer, or from the computer to an external source.
(3) Buffer area for the temporary storage of data.
Installation Contact - Departmental Staff who will
be responsible for the installation and may change the order
even if there is a resulting change in price.
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) - A
switched network providing end-to-end digital connectivity
for the simultaneous transmission of voice, data, video,
imaging and fax over several multiplexed communications
channels. Employs high-speed, out-of-band signaling
protocols that conform to international standards. [Since
signaling and communications are separate, the configuration
reduces network blockage and provides faster connectivity
for users.]
interactive - (1) A conversational mode between a
user and computer system. (2) Action in more than one
direction, either simultaneously or sequentially.
intercept - To stop a telephone call placed to an
improper number and redirect that call to an operator or a
recording.
interconnect - (1) Arrangement that permits the
connection of customers telecommunications equipment to a
common carrier network. (2) Industry name for manufacturers,
excluding AT&T and Bell companies, who provide telephone
premises equipment.
interexchange (IX) - Services or channels
furnished between one or more rate centers or local and long
distance carriers.
interexchange carrier (IXC) - A provider of long
distance service.
interexchange plant - The facilities between the
originating switching center and another switching center.
interface - (1) A hardware and software link
between two devices. (2) The junction or point of
interconnection between two systems of equipment having
different characteristics. For example, a computer card that
allows users to transmit data using a variety of
telecommunications modes.
interference - (1) Unwanted noise, crosstalk or
signal deviations on communications channels that result
from natural or man-made occurrences. (2) Anything not
properly a part of the signal or call being transmitted.
interlata - Any connection or call that originates
in one LATA and terminates in another.
intermachine trunk (IMT) - Circuit which connects
two automatic switching centers.
internal line (non-DID line) - A
non-direct-inward-dialed line on an electronic phone,
commonly called a back-up or trunk hunting line, which
parties outside the University cannot dial directly. These
numbers are assigned as 2-xxxx (Ann Arbor), 5-xxxx(Dearborn)
and 8-xxxx (Flint). Incoming calls are accepted on non-DID
lines through a call hunt sequence when the primary number
is already in use.
International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
- An organization that promotes the development of standards
to facilitate the international exchange of goods and
services as well as develops mutual cooperation in areas of
intellectual, scientific, technological and economic
activity.
International Record Carrier (IRC) - Exchange
companies that offer telex and teletypewriter interconnect
services.
Internet Service Provider (ISP) - An entity that
provides attachment to the Internet.
interoffice trunk (IOT) - A direct link between
local exchange offices.
interrupt - Stop a process in such a way that it
can be resumed.
interstate - (1) Involving two or more states. (2)
Any connection made between two states.
intraLATA - Any connection that originates and
terminates within the boundaries of a single LATA.
intrastate - (1) Activity occuring within one
state. (2) Any connection made that originates and
terminates within the boundaries of a single state.
Invoice Processing System (IPS) - Sprint's
integrated billing system for all customer bases.
ISDN - The Integrated Services Digital Network
(ISDN) Dial-In Service operates like standard telephone
service but is completely digital, allowing you to connect
to the U-M campus network (UMnet) and the Internet from off
campus at much higher speeds than with a regular analog
modem.
IT Communications Engineer - ITD Staff who work
with the department through the Network Analyst to design
the services required by the customer. May be involved
directly with the department on particularly complex
installations.
IT Communications Installer - ITD Staff who
install services at the department's site.
IT Communications Services - The ITD Staff who
provide voice, video and data services to campus.
ITD Customer
Relationship Manager (CRM) - ITD Staff who work with
the department to determine what products and services are
needed. The department's first contact within ITD.
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J
jack - A connecting device having springs which make
electrical contact with mating contacts of a plug.
jitter - (1) A distortion caused by the variation
of a signal from its references which can cause data
transmission errors, particularly at high speeds. (2)
Variations in amplitude, time, frequency or phase.
Julian calendar - Calendar that is used in data
processing. The dates are five-digit numbers: the first two
digits pertain to the year and the last three to the day of
the year (001 through 365 or 366).
jump scrolling - Vertical movement (up or down) of
data lines, one line at a time, on a cathode ray tube (CRT).
Contrast with smooth scrolling.
justify - (1) To position characters of a text so
that the left or right margins are aligned. (2) To order
digits so that the least significant or most significant is
always at the left or right margin.
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K
K - (1) In the metric system, K means 1000. (Example:
Km is 1000 meters). (2) In the computer industry, K means
210 or 1024 in decimal figures.
key system - A telecommunications system with
multi-button telephone sets on which more than one outside
line terminates, allowing several people to answer or use
more than one line. [All hardware is typically located on
subscriber premises.]
key telephone set - A multi-button phone used in a
key system.
kilo - (1) Greek word meaning 1000. (2) Prefix in
the international system of measurements. (Example:
kilohertz, kilowatts, etc.)
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L
laser - A device which transmits an extremely narrow
and coherent beam of electromagnetic energy in the visible
light spectrum. [Acronym for Light Amplification by
Stimulation of Emission of Radiation.]
latency - Time interval between when a network
station seeks access to a transmission channel and access is
granted or received.
layer - (1) Related processes, activities or
information that constitute one level in a hierarchy or
network platform. (2) Related communications-processing
functions that comprise one level in a hierarchy of
functions within the OSI reference model.
learning curve - A planning technique calculation
based on the premise that workers are able to produce any
new product more quickly after they get used to making it.
leased line - Any communication channel leased for
exclusive use from a common carrier. Synonym: private line.
least cost routing (LCR) - Method for automatic
selection of the least costly facility for transmission of a
call. Synonyms: Most Economical Route Selection (MERS);
Route Optimization; Automatic Route Selection; Flexible
Route Selection.
level - (1) A group of related functions,
activities or occurrences. (2) Expressed as the relative
signal strength at a fixed point in a communications circuit
.
lightwave communications - The use of light as the
primary medium in an actual application. [Lightwave
communications is sometimes used in place of "optical" to
avoid confusion with image transmissions such as facsimile
or television.] See fiber optics.
limited-distance modem - (1) A short-haul modem or
line driver. [Since line conditions can be better controlled
over short distances, some limited-distance modems operate
at higher speeds than modems that are designed for use over
analog telephone facilities.]
line - Any communications path between two or more
points, including satellite or microwave channels. See
channel.
line conditioning - Adjustment and control of the
properties of a leased line to bring its characteristics
within specified tariff limits; generally improves the
frequency response and delay considerations of the line.
[Line conditioning services provided by telephone carriers
are designated as Type C or D (example C1, C2 or C4).]
line driver - A modem alternative used when
transmitting via Electronics Industry Association (EIA)
cable over short distances, usually several hundred feet.
(2) Device to amplify signals and reshape distorted pulses.
line loading - Use of electrical components to
improve the response characteristics of a communications
line.
line printer - (1) A device that prints a line of
characters as a unit. (2) A line-at-a-time printer.
line side - A circuit from a subscriber's
telephone to the end or central office.
link - A communications path between two nodes in
a network.
link layer - (1) The logical entity in the OSI
model relative to transmission of data between adjacent
network nodes. (2) The second processing level in the OSI
model, between the physical and the network layers.
loading - (1) Initializing software on a computer
processing unit. (2) A means of adding regularly spaced
inductance units on a circuit to improve its transmission
characteristics.
local access and transport area (LATA) - A
geographical area designated by the FCC for the provision
and administration of telephone service to individual
customers; designated exchanges grouped to serve common
social and economic communities of interest.
Local Area Data (LAD) Circuit - One or more pairs
of copper wire leased from a Regional Bell Operating Company
(RBOC) which in Michigan's case is Ameritech. The quality of
these wires is not guaranteed.
local area network (LAN) - An interconnecting
multiple terminals, workstations, programs, storage and
graphic devices within a relatively small geographic area.
local distribution area (LDA) - An area that
includes the rate centers (NXXs) served by an originating
city.
local distribution frame(LDF) - One of the
locations in a building where equipment attaches a number of
cables for the communications outlets. Multiple LDFs are
typically attached to one BDF.
local exchange carrier (LEC) - (1) Provider of
local telephone service. (2) The provider of service within
a LATA.
local loop - (1) The communications lines/services
between the telephone subscriber and the LEC switching
center. (2) The local connection between the end user and
Class 5 central office or end office.
loop - (1) A closed circuit. (2) The single
connection from a switching center to an individual
telecommunications instrument.
loop back - A method of performing transmission
tests on a circuit which does not require the assistance of
personnel at the distant end.
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M
main distribution frame (MDF) - A steel bar
framework that is the major cross connect point for COs and
TOCs. Used to interconnect loop cable pairs and line
equipment terminals on a switching system. Synonym: Main
Frame.
main pbx - A small, local telephone office or a
device with the same functionality directly connected to a
tandem switch via an access trunk group.
mainframe - A central processing unit.
manual tie line - A private communication channel
which requires the assistance of an attendant at both ends
of the circuit in order to complete a call.
mapping - In network operations, the logical
association of one set of values, such as addresses on one
network, with other quantities or values, such as devices on
a second network (for example name-address mapping,
internetwork-route mapping).
mark - (1) Symbol or symbols that indicate the
beginning or the end of a field, word, item of data or sets
of data such as a file, a record or a block. (2) To place a
lead or ground on a terminal so that a hunting circuit may
find that position and connect other equipment to it. (3) An
indication, often in software, which shows the class of
service to which a line is entitled, such as residential,
business or public coin phone.
mean time to repair (MTTR) - The average time
required to restore a customer's service after a network
failure. [In Sprint, this figure represents all failures due
to either electronic components or fiber-optic cable
malfunction POP-to-POP.]
medium - [plural; media] (1) Material on which
computer data is recorded, for example, magnetic tape,
floppy diskette, winchester disk. (2) Any material substance
that can be used for the propagation of signals from one
point to another. (3) The communications forum chosen on
marketing promotions and/or customer information.
mega - (1) A Greek word meaning one million. (2) A
prefix in the international system of measurements; for
example: megabytes, that is one million bytes (106).
megabyte - Literally 1,000,000 bytes; usually 1024
x 1024 bytes.
megahertz (Mhz) - 1,000,000 (106) cycles per
second.
message - Complete transmission of data or text.
Sometimes used interchangeably with block.
Message Processing System (MPS) - Sprint system
which prepares calls for invoicing. [MPS feeds to all
billing systems as well as providing informational input on
all billable and nonbillable traffic to network systems.]
message telephone system (MTS) - (1) Generic name
for the switched long distance service offered by all
interexchange carriers. (2) An offering for which a charge
is made in accordance with a measured amount of usage
referred to as message units. Also referred to as Measured
Telephone Service or Direct Distance Dialing (DDD).
message unit (MU) - Standard against which charges
for messages based on time and distance are measured.
microwave - Any electromagnetic wave in the radio
frequency spectrum above 890 megahertz.
millisecond - One-thousandth of a second.
mode - (1) The most common or frequent value in a
frequency distribution. (2) A particular form or variety of
software.
modem - [Contraction of Modulator-Demodulator.] A
device which modulates and demodulates signals on a carrier
frequency and allows the interface of digital terminals with
analog carrier systems. [A modem is also known as a
dataset.]
modulation - Alterations in the characteristics of
carrier waves, usually impressed on the amplitude and/or the
frequency, for the purpose of transferring information.
module - (1) A unit of something. (2) A unit of
code performing a distinct function.
monitoring device - Equipment which records data
-- originating number, length, location -- on calls placed
through a company telephone system.
most economical route selection (MERS) - Method
for automatic selection of the least costly facility for
transmission of a call. Synonym: least cost routing
mouse - Hand-held device which is moved around on
a flat surface in order to position the cursor on a video
display.
multidrop line - Communications link with more
than one terminal or station connected to it.
multileaving - Transmission, usually via bisync
facilities and protocols, of a variable number of
datastreams between user devices and a computer.
multiplex - (1) To interleave or simultaneously
transmit two or more messages on a single channel. (2) A
communications arrangement where multiple devices share a
common transmission channel, though only one may transmit at
a time.
multiplexer - Hardware device that allows handling
of multiple variable speed signals over a single, higher
speed channel.
multiplexing - Process or equipment that combines
data from two or more individual circuits onto a higher
speed circuit for transmission. [Two methods are used: (1)
Frequency division where all channels are transmitted at the
same time. (2) Time division where several messages
timeshare a channel.]
multipoint - (1) Line or channel connecting more
than two different service points. (2) Circuit having points
served by three or more switches.
Multiple Appearance Directory Number (MADN) -
allows the same directory number to appear on more than one
telephone.
multitasking - System that can run two or more
programs at the same time. [Apple's Multifinder, AT&T's UNIX
and IBM's OS/2 are multitasking operating systems. By
contrast, MS-DOS is a single-tasking operating system.]
mux - [Abbreviation for multiplexing] The process
or equipment for combining a number of paths into a single
path or bit stream for transmission.
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N
nanosecond (NS, NSEC) - One-thousandth-millionth
(or billionth) of a second. (10-9 second.)
network - (1) System of mutually-communicating
devices (for example: computers, terminals, peripheral
devices, process controllers) connected in common and for a
purpose by one or more transmission facilities. (2) A
collection of switches connected to one another by
transmission facilities.
Network Administrator - Departmental Staff member
responsible for administering and maintaining a network.
network architecture - The philosophy and
organizational concept for enabling communications between
equipment at multiple locations; detailed specifications
outlining the processors, terminals and transmission media,
protocols and software to be used to accomplish accurate
communications.
network layer - The logical network entity that
services the transport layer in the OSI model. It is
responsible for ensuring that data passed to it from the
transport layer is routed and delivered through the network.
Network Operations Center (NOC) - The center
responsible for monitoring network equipment. Usually a
24x365 operation.
network ring-again - A feature on a PBX that
allows a caller, after encountering a busy signal, to be
notified when the called line becomes free, provides the
option of automatically reinstating the call.
network topology - (1) Describes the physical and
logical relationship of nodes in a network. (2) The
schematic arrangement of the links and nodes of a network,
typically either a star, ring, tree or bus topology, or some
hybrid combination thereof.
network trunks - Circuits connecting switching
centers.
network virtual terminal - A communications
concept wherein a variety of DTEs, with different data
rates, protocols, codes, and formats, are accommodated in
the same network. This is done as a result of network
processing, where each device's data is converted into a
network standard format, then converted into the format of
the receiving device at the destination end.
nibble - Popular name for four bits, or half a
byte. Also spelled nybble.
node - (1) In network topology, a terminal of any
branch of a network or a terminal common to two or more
branches of a network. (2) In a switched network, the
switching points, including patch and control facilities.
(3) In a data network, the location of a data station which
interconnects data transmission lines. (4) A point in a
standing wave at which the amplitude is at a minimum.
Synonyms: junction point, nodal point, vertex, null.
noise - (1) Unplanned energy introduced onto a
communications path, resulting in transmission errors.
Undesirable signals bearing no desired information. (2) The
unpredictable difference between the observed data and the
true process.
non-blocking - A switching network having a
sufficient number of paths such that an originating call can
always reach any other idle station without encountering a
busy signal.
nonvolatile storage - A medium that maintains or
keeps its contents when the power is removed.
NNX (network numbering exchange) - Former
three-digit location code which represented a central
office. Now in NXX form, the available number of CO codes
has been increased by permitting 0 and 1 as second digits in
some circumstances. (See NXX.)
NPA (numbering plan area) - A geographical
boundary within which no two telephones will have the same
seven-digit number. "N" is any number between two and nine,
"P" is always one or zero; and "A" is any number excluding
zero. (2) Area code.
NXX (network numbering exchange) - An American
Central Office Code where N is a digit 2 thru 9, and X is a
digit 0 thru 9. Previously in NNX form, the available number
of codes has now been increased by permitting 0 and 1 as
second digits in some circumstances (previously their use
was restricted to NPA codes).
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O
object program - (1) Fully compiled or assembled
software that is ready to be loaded into the computer. (2)
The output from processing a source program through an
assembler or compiler. Synonym: object code.
off-hook - (1) Condition existing when the
receiver or handset is removed from its switchhook. (2) The
active state (closed loop) of a single telephone or PBX line
loop.
off-line - (1) Condition that exists when devices
or subsystems are not connected into, do not form a part of
and/or are not subject to the same controls as an
operational system. (2) A device which is not permanently
connected to the processor or to external circuits.
off-network access line (ONAL) - (1) A connection
from a private switched network to the public switched
network.
(2) The connection provided by a carrier and used in common
by subscribers to enter and/or exit from the switched
network.
(3) Circuit between Sprint switch and the line side of a
telco office for FGA services.
off-network access trunk (ONAT) - The circuit
between the Sprint switch and the trunk side of a telco
office for FGB and FGD services.
off-network calling - Telephone calls which
originate in or pass through private switching systems in
transmission networks and are extended to stations in the
public telephone system.
off-premises extension (OPX) - Peripheral PBX
equipment located in a building other than the one housing
the PBX itself.
on hook - (1) Condition existing when the receiver or
handset is resting on the switchhook. (2) The idle state
(open loop) of a single telephone or PBX line loop.
on network calling - A call that originates and
terminates on a private network.
on-line system - A network interface which
provides direct interface between applications programs
stored in the computer and terminals used for data entry and
output.
operating system - Software that controls the
management and execution of programs.
operator assisted calls - (1) Direct distance
dialing (DDD) calls which require and receive help by
telephone company operators. (2) Person-to-person, collect
calls, calling card calls from rotary phones, etc.
optical fiber - Any filament or fiber made of
dielectric materials that is used to transmit light and/or
to guide signals. [Optical fiber typically consists of a
core, that carries the signal and cladding, a substance with
a slightly higher refractive index than the core, which
surrounds the core and serves to reflect the light signal
back into it.]
original equipment manufacturer (OEM) - (1)
Producer of a product made for assembly into a final system
or larger subassembly by another.
originating office - The central office that
serves the calling party.
other common carriers (OCC) - Specialized common
carriers, domestic or international record carriers and
domestic satellite carriers engaged in providing private
line services (voice, data, audio or video) as authorized by
the FCC.
out-of-band - (1) Any entity outside an assigned
range, scope or magnitude. (2) Any frequency outside the
spectrum used for voice.
out-of-band signaling - Use of a seperate data
link which is not in the voice circuit to transmit call
set-up and ANI information from carrier to carrier, or from
carrier to customer.
outage - (1) Any disruption of service. (2) The
point at which a customer releases a circuit for repair,
lasting until the circuit is returned to the customer in
working condition.
outage time - Accumulated interval between unavailable
and restoration time. It begins when a customer releases the
circuit for repair and ends when the circuit is returned to the
customer.
outbound telemarketing - Any outgoing call designed to
sell or service a customer or prospect. [Outbound telemarketing
includes: lead generations, setting appointments, direct sales,
collections and sales support.]
overbuild - Adding radio capacity to a
telecommunications network.
overflow - (1) Switching equipment which operates when
the traffic load exceeds the capacity of the regular equipment.
(2) Traffic which is handled on overflow equipment. (3) Traffic
which exceeds switching capacity and is lost. (4) The carry
digit in a digital computer. (5) Intermediate message storage
which serves as an extension of in-transit storage to preclude
system saturation; an example, magnetic tape.
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P
P factor - Grade of service which describes the
percentage of blocked calls. For example, P.10 means that 10
percent of all calls were blocked; P.01 means that 1 percent of
all calls were blocked.
packet assembler/disassembler (PAD) - (1) A
non-adjustable resistance network used to insert transmission
loss into a circuit. (2) To fill a block with dummy data,
usually zeros or blanks.
PAD character - A fill character inserted when
insufficient data characters are present to satisfy a field
length requirement.
parity - A constant state or equal value.
parity bit - A check character or bit appended to an
array of binary digits to make the sum of the digits, including
the check bit, always odd or always even.
parity checking - One of the oldest error checking
techniques. Character bit patterns are forced into parity (total
number of bits odd or even) by adding a 1 or 0 bit as
appropriate, as they are transmitted. The parity (odd or even)
is then verified upon receipt by the receiving device.
patch - (1) To make an improvised modification (2) To
change a software routine in a rough or expedient way. (3) A
temporary electrical connection.
PBX trunk - Connects a customer's PBX to another PBX,
central office (CO), remote CO or Sprint switch. (See Private
Branch exchange).
percent denial - (1) A measure of the grade of service
provided on a dial access circuit group; the average percentage
of attempts blocked or denied due to a busy condition during the
busy hour.
peripheral - Any input/output device such as a printer
or modem that is not a part of the main computer.
personal identification number (PIN) - The last two
digits of an authorization code that identify the caller. [The
14-digit number on a Sprint FONCARD that uniquely identifies the
card holder.]
phase jitter - A random distortion of signal lengths.
[Phase jitter interferes with interpretation of information by
changing the timing.]
phosphor - Material which coats the back side of a CRT
screen.
physical layer - Within the OSI model, lowest level of
network processing below the link layer that is concerned with
the electrical, mechanical and handshaking procedures over the
interface that connects a device to a transmission medium
(example, RS-232-C).
picture element (pixel) - (1) A single dot on a
computer display. (2) The smallest discrete part of a video
image, the size of which is controlled by an analog-to-digital
conversion sampling process. [The more picture elements per
line, the higher the resolution of the image.]
pixel - Single dot on a computer display, short for
picture element.
point-of-presence (POP) - The physical location within
a LATA (local access and transport area) where an interexchange
carrier's circuits connect with the lines of the local telephone
company serving that LATA.
point-to-point circuit - A private communications link
between two terminations which does not connect with a public
telephone system.
polar keying - Technique of current loop signaling in
which electrical flow direction establishes the two-level binary
code.
polling - Process by which a computer checks the
readiness of other units to transmit or receive signals and
information.
port - (1) Entrance or access point to a computer,
multiplexer network or device where signals may be supplied,
extracted or observed. (2) The place where a peripheral device
is connected to a computer.
Postal, Telephone and Telegraph (PTT) - International
administration, usually government controlled, which manages and
operates postal and telecommunications services outside the
country. Typically a monopoly operation.
PostScript - Page-description programming language
developed by Adobe Systems; designed to handle the placement of
text and graphics on a page. The same PostScript file can be
transmitted to printers of varying resolutions.
presentation layer - The OSI processing layer that
provides services to the application layer, allowing it to
interpret the data exchanged as well as structure data messages
to be transmitted in a specific display and control format.
preventive maintenance - Precautionary measures taken
on a system to forestall failures by providing for systematic
inspection, detection and correction of incipient problems
before they develop into major defects.
Primary Directory Number(PDN) - your phone number. A
PDN appears on the bottom button of an electronic phone, is the
phone number assigned to a personal set. Dial 191 to determine
the PDN if it is not marked.
primary routing point - The switch designated as the
control point for a long-haul telephone call.
private automatic branch exchange (PABX) - Small,
local, automatic telephone office serving extensions in a
business complex and providing access to the public network.
private automatic exchange (PAX) - Small, local,
automatic telephone office, normally serving extensions in a
business complex, typically without external lines to the public
network.
private branch exchange (PBX) - Small, local,
telephone office - either manually or automatically operated -
serving extensions in a business complex and providing access to
the public domain.
private line - (1) A point-to-point telephone line for
the exclusive use of one party. (2) A leased, owned or otherwise
dedicated channel.
Private Line Service Center (PLSC) - Sprint organization
which manages and maintains private line services. Each
department is staffed with experienced professionals and subject
matter experts in Private Line installation, service and
support.
private use network - Two or more channels contracted
for by a customer and restricted for use by that customer only.
program - A series of instructions or statements
assembled in a form acceptable to a computer and prepared to
achieve a certain result.
prospect profile - A detailed description of a
potential customer; the profile generally includes financial,
demographic, industry, job title and past buying history
information.
protocol - A set of formalized conventions governing
the format and relative timing of message exchange in a
communications network.
protocol conversion - Process of translating
communications formats and timing, which would otherwise be
incompatible, into messages understood by the network. Performed
by a dedicated device, a software package loaded onto an
existing system or by a value-added (intelligent) network.
public service commission (PSC) - A regulatory
authority at state level.
public switched network (PSN) - Any switching system
that provides a circuit switched to many customers.
public utility commission (PUC) - A regulatory
authority at state level.
pulse - (1) A signal that can be wholly described by a
constant amplitude and the duration time. (2) Signal form
typically used internally in computers, terminals and other
business machines as well as in communications facilities.
pulse code modulation (PCM) - Method of sampling
information signals at regular intervals and transmitting the
samples as a series of pulses in coded form which represent the
amplitude of the information signal at that time.
pulse modulation - Method of varying the amplitude,
frequency or phrase of information-bearing signals into a series
of pulses. [Typical methods involve modifying the amplitude
(PAM), width or duration (PDM) or position (PPM). The most
common pulse modulation technique in telephone work is pulse
code modulation (PCM).]
pulse-link repeater - A device used to magnify signals
in a telephone circuit and re-transmit corresponding pulses to
another signaling circuit.
pushbutton dialing - Type of signaling which emits two
distinct frequencies for each indicated digit. Synonym: dual
tone multifrequency (DTMF).
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Q
quarter common intermediate format (QCIF) - A subset
of the coded video signals transmitted when using CCITT Rec.
H.261 coding methods.
quality improvement process (QIP) - A team-based,
structured, problem-solving process aimed at achieving
exceptional customer satisfaction.
queue - (1) To arrange or form in a line. (2) A
waiting line. (3) A series of elements, one waiting behind the
other. (4) A temporary delay in providing service caused by the
inability of the particular system to handle the number of
messages or calls attempted (example, a call queued for the
least expensive route).
queued telecommunications access method (QTAM) -
Method used to transfer data between main storage and remote
terminals; may also be employed for data collection, message
switching and many other teleprocessing efforts involving queued
messages or direct access storage devices.
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R
radio common carrier (RCC) - A communications carrier
that provides radio paging and mobile telephone services to the
public.
random access memory (RAM) - Portion of a computer
storage which can be accessed non-sequentially and is considered
the working memory.
raster - Scanning pattern used in generating,
recording or reproducing television, facsimile or graphics
images on a screen.
rate center - Specific geographic location used by
LECs to determine interchange mileage for rate determination
purposes. [The rate center for an exchange is generally a
centrally located point within the exchange area.]
rate mileage - Airline distance from one subscriber's
rate center to all other LEC rate centers.
rate periods - Division of a day into categories for
charges: day, evening, night/weekend.
re-homing - A network change which involves moving
customer services from one switching center to another and
establishing the necessary trunking facilities to do so.
read only memory (ROM) - Portion of computer
memory which is programmed electrically by the manufacturer,
is unchangeable and is unaffected by a power loss.
real-time ANI - Delivery of automatic number
identification (either the full phone number of the calling
party or the NPA & NXX) simultaneously with the call. [ANI is
used by telephone companies for routing and billing.]
record - A single, logically associated information
group.
redundancy - (1) Duplicate standby equipment or
facilities that are activated to insure continuous service or
minimize the effect of equipment malfunctions. (2) A repetition
of information. (3) Insertion of information which is not new
(example: the use of check bits and check characters in data
communication).
regeneration - Process of receiving distorted signal
pulses and from them recreating new pulses at the correct
repetition rate, pulse amplitude and pulse width.
Regional Bell Operating Company (RBOC) - The seven
holding companies into which the 22 Bell System local telephone
companies were assigned at divestiture: Pacific Telesis, U.S.
West, Southwestern Bell Corp., Ameritech, BellSouth, Bell
Atlantic, NY NEX.
remote access - (1) PABX feature that allows a user at
a remote location to access PABX features by telephone (for
example, WATS lines); individual authorization codes are usually
required. (2) Ability of transmission points to gain access to a
computer which is at a different location.
repeater - (1) A device which serves as an interface
between circuits, receiving signals from one circuit and
transmitting them to the other. (2) A one- or two-way device
which amplifies an input signal for retransmission. (3) A device
that amplifies, reshapes, retimes or performs a combination of
these functions on an input pulse for re-transmission.
repeating coil - Separates one section of a telephone
circuit from another, with no direct current link between the
sections. [Telephone industry's term for a voice frequency
transformer.]
resale carrier - Company which leases circuits or
services from a major carrier and resells them to individual
users.
restoration - Re-establishment of services, usually
following the breakdown of a system, on a priority basis.
retard coil - A coil having a large inductance which
slows sudden changes of the current flow; a choke.
reverse channel - A simultaneous data path in the
reverse direction over a half-duplex facility; used for
positive/negative acknowledgements of previously received data
blocks.
red video signal - A video transmission in which the
red (R) green (G) and blue (B) picture components are present as
individual signals. [Synchronization information may be included
with the G signal or may be separate.]
ring - To activate a called subscriber's telephone
bell.
ringback - Signal used by the operator at the
receiving end of an established connection to recall an
operator at originating end. Synonym: Audible Ringing Tone.
ringdown - A circuit or a method of signaling
where the incoming signal is actuated by alternating current
over the circuit.
rotary dial - A mechanism having a 10-hole finger
wheel which when wound and released causes pulsing contacts to
interrupt the line current and operate the central office
selecting equipment in accordance with the digit dialed.
rotary hunt - Method in which incoming calls seek out
an idle circuit in a prearranged multi-circuit group and find
the next open line to establish a through circuit.
route advance - Feature of Sprint 800 Service which
automatically assigns an alternate communications path when the
primary path is busy; calls are routed to DDD lines.
route optimization - Method for automatic selection of
the least costly facility for transmission of a call. Synonym:
Least Cost Routing.
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S
satellite relay - Active or passive repeater in
geosynchronous orbit which amplifies the signal it receives
before transmitting it back to earth.
scrolling - The vertical movement (up or down) of
lines of data displayed on a CRT screen. Also see smooth
scrolling and jump scrolling.
secondary channel - Low-speed channel established on a
four-wire circuit over which diagnostic or control information
is passed. [User data is passed on the primary, high-speed
channels of the circuit.]
selective calling - Ability of a transmitting station
to specify which of several stations is to receive a message
through the use of assigned codes.
Service Delivery Improvement Project(SDIP) - From
November 1996 through the end of 1997, ITD conducted a Service
Delivery Improvement Project to reengineer the way it delivered
basic telephone and data services to its customers across the
Ann Arbor, Flint, and Dearborn campuses of the University of
Michigan.
service and equipment record - List of equipment
billed to customer by type, quantity, monthly charge, location
and billing dates.
service group - One or more access lines (DAL or T1)
used to terminate calls from one or more 800 service numbers; a
group of lines built as one trunk group from a DMS-250 switch.
[A call placed to an 800 number routed to that trunk group can
be completed on any of the lines in that trunk group.]
session - (1) Connection between two stations that
allows them to communicate. (2) Meeting or period devoted to a
particular activity.
session layer - Layer 5 of the Open Systems
Interconnection (OSI) model, responsible for binding and
unbinding logical links between end users and maintaining an
orderly dialog between them.
severely errored second (SES) - One-second interval
where the bit error ratio (BER) exceeds 10-3.
shielded pair - Two insulated wires in a cable wrapped
with metallic braid or foil to prevent signal interferences and
provide noise-free transmission.
short haul - Circuit designed for use over distances
of less than 200 miles.
shoutdown line - A point-to-point circuit which
permits one station to go off-hook and the conversation is
automatically relayed to the distance point; used primarily
between single-line telephones which are connected to
speakers.
sideband - Set of frequencies which are produced
on either side of the carrier signal as a result of the
modulation process. [Upper sidebands (USB) are higher in
frequency than the carrier; lower sidebands (LSB) are below
the frequency of the carrier. Various modulation techniques
make use of one or both of the sidebands.]
signal - An intentional introduction of energy onto a
communications path, resulting in the transmission of
information. Contrast with noise.
signal-to-noise ratio - Relative power of the signal
information to the noise in a specified bandwidth, usually
expressed in decibels (dB). [As the ratio decreases on a line,
it becomes more difficult to distinguish between information and
non-information (noise).]
signaling - (1) Use of signals for communication. (2)
Method of conveying signals over a circuit. (3) The exchange of
electrical information other than by speech. (4) Means of
establishing and controlling connections in a communications
network.
Signing Authority - Departmental Staff responsible for
authorizing an expenditure.
Simple Network Management Protocol(SNMP) - A protocol
used to manage devices on a network.
simplex - One-way data transmission, with no
capability for changing direction.
singing - (1) An undesired, self-sustaining whistle or
howl in an amplified telephone circuit. (2) An occurrence when
the sum of the repeater gains exceeds the sum of the circuit
losses.
slope - (1) Difference in attenuation of the various
frequencies in a band of frequencies; measured in decibels. (2)
Measurement of the frequency response of a channel. See
attenuation.
smart terminal - (1) A display unit that can operate
in either conversational or block mode and can support a full
range of local editing capabilities. (2) A computer with
communications capabilities.
smooth scrolling - Continuous vertical movement (up or
down) of lines of data displayed on a CRT screen, much in the
same manner as a credit roll at the end of a movie. Contrast
with jump scrolling.
snapshot - (1) Extract or summary of data taken from a
given system. (2) Extract passed to another system to complete
processing.
software - (1) Any of the routines, programs and
instructions required to use computers. (2) A written statement
of the procedures to be used and the format of the data at every
step.
source - Terminal or node at which data enters a
network.
speakerphone - Telephone equiped with a speaker and a
microphone that allows hands-free conversation.
special grade network trunk - A trunk conditioned
to parameters, by providing amplitude and delay equalization
for the purpose of handling special services such as
medium-speed data (600 to 2400 bps).
specialized carrier - A company that provides
value-added communications facilities to limited
geographical areas or for specific services.
specialized common carrier (SCC) - A company that
provides private line services, such as voice, teleprinter,
data, facsimile transmission. Synonym : Other Common
Carrier.
speed number - A one-, three- or four-digit number
that replaces a seven- or ten-digit telephone number.
Numbers programmed into a PBX, the switch in the carrier's
office, or individual smart telephones.
split screen - Capability of a CRT screen to be
divided into two or more independent workspaces.
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) - U.S.
government code that categorizes commercial enterprises. [The
first two digits place an organization in one of the 13 major
groupings; two additional digits show the primary line of
business and size.]
star - A network topology in which each station is
connected only to a central station by a point-to-point link;
all stations communicate through the central station.
star-lan - A local network design and
specification within IEE 802.3 standards subcommittee;
characterized by data transmission over two-pair
twisted-pair wiring.
start bit - A signal in asynchronous transmission
used to signify the beginning of a character or a block of
data.
station - Any input or output points in a
communications system capable of sending or receiving messages
or calls.
station message detail recording (SMDR) - A computer
generated report showing internal usage on a telephone system;
usually includes extension number, trunk number used, phone
number dialed, time of call, duration and operator involvement.
statistical multiplexing - A time-division
interleaving technique in which timeslots are dynamically
allocated on the basis of need or to equipment with data to be
transmitted.
stop bit - In asynchronous transmission, the bit that
indicates the end of a block of data.
store-and-forward - (1) Technique in which a message
is received from the originator and held in storage until a
circuit to the addressee becomes available. (2) Transmittal of
complete network messages or packets into storage before sending
them forward to the next center. (3) Capture of transaction data
on magnetic media for subsequent batch input to a computer.
stored program control (SPC) - A method whereby
instructions are placed in the memory of a common controlled
switching unit for use as a reference when processing calls.
Instructions may include: class marks, code conversions, routing
and trouble analysis.
strap - Hard-wired connection link between two tags,
terminals or items of equipment. [A strapping option is one
implemented by changing wires.]
subnet - A computer network composed of all devices
whose IP addresses have the same prefix. Dividing a network into
subnets is useful for both security and performance reasons.
supergroup - In frequency division multiplexing
(FDM), five channel banks, each containing 12 circuits,
combined into a group bank to produce 60 voice channels.
supermastergroup - In frequency division
multiplexing (FDM), 10 group banks are combined to produce
600 voice channels.
supervisory signal - A signal, such as on- or off-hook,
which indicates whether a circuit is in use.
supported product - A product IT Communications
Services has experience with and expects to have a reasonably
long life cycle. ITD will typically be more efficient at
engineering, acquiring, maintaining and repairing equipment in
this category and this will be reflected in pricing.
suspense file - An electronic file or folder in which
records are kept until errors or problems are resolved.
switch - An electronic device which opens or closes
circuits, changes operating parameters or selects paths either
on a space or time division basis.
switched 56/64 kbps data transmission - Provides users
with the end-to-end capability to transport high-speed data (up
to 64 kbps) over the public network.
switched line - One of a series of lines that can be
interconnected to all other lines through a switching center; a
line on the public telephone network. Contrast with leased line.
switched message network - Any network service
providing interconnection of message devices such as
teletypewriters.
switched network - A multipoint network with circuit
switching capabilities.
switching center - Location where an incoming
call/message is automatically or manually directed to one or
more outgoing circuits.
switching office - Telephone company location housing
a switch.
sync character - Character or defined bit pattern used
by a receiving terminal to adjust its clock and achieve
synchronization with the master clocking device.
synchronization - Process of adjusting a receiving
terminal or switch clock to match the transmitting system's
master clock.
synchronous - Having a constant time interval between
successive bits, characters or events. [Synchronous transmission
uses no redundant information (such as the start and stop bits
in asynchronous transmission) to identify the beginning and end
of characters; thus it is faster and more efficient than
asynchronous transmission.]
syntax - Rules governing structure in a programming
language.
syntax error - System response to a mistake in its
instructions, such as a transposition of characters or an
omission of a character or word.
system design - Specifications of the working
relations between all the parts of a system in terms of their
characteristic actions.
system reliability - Probability that a system will
perform its specified task properly under stated conditions of
environment.
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T
t1 - (1) A 1.544 circuit with the equivalent of 24
analogs. (2) The basic 24-channel 1.544 Mbps pulse code
modulation system used in the United States.
T-carrier - General designation of any digital
transmission system.
table driven - A logical computer process in which a
user-entered variable is matched against an array of predefined
values. Frequently used logical process in network routing,
access security and modem operation.
tail end hop off (TEHO) - Call in a private network
which is carried over flat rate facilities (intermachine trunks
or IMTs) to the switching node closest to its destination and is
connected into the public network as a local call.
tandem - A switching arrangement in which the
trunk from the calling office is connected to a trunk at the
called office through an intermediate point; serves to
interconnect central offices when direct interoffice trunks
are not available.
tandem switching - The use of an intermediate switch
or switches to interconnect circuits from the switch of one
serving central office to the switch of a second serving central
office in the same exchange.
tandem switching system - See Tandem Tie Trunk
Network.
tandem tie trunk network (TTTN) - A serving
arrangement which permits sequential connection of a group of
private lines between PBX or CENTREX locations by utilizing a
tandem switching operation.
tandem trunking - Group of lines which connect two
or more switches together.
tariff - The published rates, regulations and
descriptions governing the provisions of communications
service.
task - A unit of work for the central processing
unit.
Technical Operating Center (TOC) - Sprint location
where telecommunications operations and equipment are tested
and monitored; each center contains wire centers, test
jacks, equipment racks, mux and radio equipment. [TOC
operations include circuit installation, circuit maintenance
and performance monitoring. Some, but not all TOCs, are
equipped with switch equipment.]
telco - Local telephone company; local exchange
carrier.
telecommunication lines - Circuits, trunks, cables
and other links that are used to transmit messages from one
location to another.
telecommunications - The transmission of voice, video
and/or data through a medium by means of electrical impulses;
all aspects of information transmittal.
telecommunications common carrier (TCC) - Person, firm
or corporation that owns or operates telecommunications
facilities for the purpose of providing either the facilities or
services for profit.
teleconference - Three or more people connected by
telephone and capable of maintaining a continuous connection.
telegraph - A device which interrupts or changes the
polarity of DC current signaling to convey coded information.
telegraphy - System of communicating coded information
by the transmission of electrical signals generated by a
telegraph key.
telemetry - Transmission of a measurement over long
distances, usually by electromagnetic means. Includes the
apparatus for measuring, formulating and recording the value of
a measured quantity at a distance. For example water level
monitoring or flow-rate metering.
telephone - Device which converts acoustical energy
(sound) into electrical energy for transmission to a distant
point.
Teletype - (1) Trademark of the Teletype Corporation.
(2) Frequently used as a generic name for keyboard/printers and
for asynchronous transmission.
teletypewriter - Machine used to transmit and/or
receive communications on a printed page and/or tape.
teletypewriter exchange service (TWX) - A service in
which a customer's leased teletypewriter is connected to a TWX
switchboard to be routed over regular toll circuits to any other
customer who subscribes to a similar service.
terminal - (1) A point at which information can enter or
leave a communications network. (2) A device for the input or
output of data.
terminal equipment - Devices, apparatuses and
associated interfaces used to forward information to a local
customer or distant point.
termination - (1) Item such as a port that is
connected to the end point of a circuit or equipment. (2) The
points on a switching network to which a trunk or line may be
attached.
test marketing - Research conducted within a small
targeted consumer group to determine the viability of an
expanded program.
test period - A defined amount of time used to measure
circuit performance prior to releasing the circuit to a
customer, usually after initial installation.
tie-line - A private line communications channel
provided by communications common carriers that links two or
more points together.
time division multiplexing (TDM) - (1) Sharing a
single facility among several data paths by dividing up the
channel capacity into time slices. (2) Equipment which enables
the transmitting of signals over a single common path by
transmitting them sequentially at different instants of time.
time out - Set waiting period before a terminal system
performs some action. [Typical uses include a poll release (when
a terminal is disconnected if the time-out period elapses before
keying resumes) or an access time-out.]
time-sharing - The sharing of available processing
time on a single computer system among multiple simultaneous
users.
token bus - Local network access mechanism and
topology in which all stations actively attached to the bus
listen for a broadcast token or supervisory frame. Stations
wishing to transmit must receive the token before doing so;
however, the next physical station to transmit is not
necessarily the next physical station on the bus. Bus access is
controlled by preassigned priority algorithms.
token passing - Local area network access
technique in which participating stations circulate a
special bit patter (the token) that grants network access to
each station in sequence; often used in networks with a ring
topology.
token ring - Local network access and topology in
which a supervisory frame or token is passed from station to
station in sequential order. Stations wishing to gain access to
the network must wait for the token to arrive before
transmitting data. In a token ring, the next logical station
receiving the token is also the next physical station on the
ring.
toll call - Any transmission on the public switched
network to a point outside the local service area.
toll center - Central office where operators (human or
mechanical) are present to assist in completing incoming toll
calls.
toll office - Switching center where inter-city
circuits terminate; usually one switching center in a city is
designated as the toll office and is also used for mileage rate
measurements.
toll plant - Facilities that connect toll offices
throughout the country.
toll restriction - Arrangement by which some telephone
lines are denied access to long distance circuits.
topology - Logical or physical arrangement of stations
on a network in relation to one another. See bus, ring, star and
tree.
touch sensitive - System which identifies physical
contact on a screen by coordinates and transmits the information
to a computer to be translated into some system action.
touchtone - (1) Refers to DTMF signaling equipment.
(2) Frequently used to describe telephone equipment with
pushbuttons.
touchtone adapter - Device that can be connected to a
rotary dial telephone to allow for dual tone multifrequency tone
(DTMF) signaling.
trace - Technique used in trouble shooting and/or
debugging computer programs and equipment.
traffic - (1) All calls sent and received over a
communications network. (2) The total information flow of a
communications system at any given time.
traffic measurement and recording systems (TMRS) - A
computer-generated report with usage information of telephone
systems; usually includes trunk utilization, outages, queuing
time and the need for additional common equipment.
traffic overflow - Condition that occurs when the
number of calls to be processed exceeds the capacity of a
particular trunk groups, and calls are redirected automatically
or manually to another trunk group.
traffic service position (TSP) - A computer-controlled
operating position.
traffic volume analysis - Study of call patterns in a
communications network.
transmission - The electrical transfer of a signal,
message or other form of data from one location to another
without unacceptable loss of information content due to
attenuation, distortion or noise.
transmission level - Level of signal power, normally
1,000 Hz, which should be measured at a particular reference
point.
transmission speed - Number of pulses or bits
transmitted in a given period of time, usually expressed as bits
per second (bps) or words per minute (wpm).
transponder - Electronic device on-board a satellite
to amplify signals prior to re-transmitting them back to earth.
transport layer - In the OSI model, the network
processing entity responsible for the end-to-end control of
transmitted data and the optimized use of network resources;
works in conjunction with the underlying network, data, link and
physical layers.
tree - Type of bus topology in which the network
branches out at certain points along its length to connect
stations or clusters of stations; also called a branching bus.
truncation - (1) Removal of one or more digits,
characters or bits from one end of a block of data when a string
length or target variable has been exceeded. (2) To cut off at a
specified spot.
trunk - (1) Group of circuits that carry call traffic
in and out of the switch. (2) Circuit or channel connecting two
exchanges or two switching devices. (3) Circuit capable of being
switched at both ends and provided with the necessary
terminating and signaling equipment. [Trunk differs from a line
which is a circuit, one end of which does not terminate on a
switching machine.]
trunk group - Arrangement of communications channels
into an identical group.
trunk side - Circuit termination that connects other
central offices and the toll network.
trunk type - Circuits that use the same type of
equipment going to the same terminating location.
trunk utilization report (TUR) - A computer printout
detailing the traffic on a trunk.
tuning - The process of adjusting system control
variables to make the system divide its resources most
efficiently for the workload.
Twitter - A very popular
instant messaging system that lets a person send brief text
messages up to 140 characters in length to a list of followers.
Launched in 2006, Twitter was designed as a social network to
keep friends and colleagues informed throughout the day.
However, it became widely used for commercial and political
purposes to keep customers, constituents and fans up-to-date as
well as to solicit feedback.
After establishing a Twitter account at www.twitter.com,
individuals can import their e-mail addresses as well as use the
Twitter search to locate and invite people. Twitter messages
("tweets") can be made public and sent to anyone requesting the
feed, or they can be sent only to approved followers.
Messages can be sent and received via cellphone text messaging
(SMS), the Twitter Web site or a third-party Twitter
application. A MySpace account can also be updated. To follow a
Twitter feed, the Twitter site and feed name become the URL; for
example, RCI's Twitter feed is
http://www.twitter.com/richardsconsult.
Replies and Direct Messages (DMs)
Initially a one-way broadcast from writer to follower, Twitter
added a reply function that turned Twitter into a discussion
group service.
Tweets can also be private. Writers can send followers a private
message called a "direct message" (DM), and followers can do
likewise. Followers can also delete the DMs they sent, making
them disappear from the writer's inbox.
Tweets can also be private. Writers can send followers a private
message called a "direct message" (DM), and followers can do
likewise. Followers can also delete the DMs they sent, making
them disappear from the writer's inbox.
@ Signs and Hashtags
When someone replies to a Twitter posting, they use their
Twitter account name preceded by an @ sign. For example,
@JohnDoe might be the Twitter account name for John Doe.
A hashtag is a # prefix used to group tweets together. For
example, people commenting about a Twitter event in New York
used #nyctweetup in their postings, and all those messages could
be viewed as a group by searching for #nyctweetup.
tweet a posting on Twitter
Twitter feed ongoing Twitter messages
Twitterer,
tweeter tweet writer
Twitaholic,
Twitterholic constant Twitter user
tweeple tweet writers and followers
tweetup, gathering of people brought
Twestival together via Twitter
Twitterati writers with many followers
Twittersphere, total universe of
Twitterverse Twitter writers/followers
twittiquette good manners on Twitter
twiller novel distributed in tweets
twam Twitter spam -too many ads/links
twammer the Twitter spammer
twishing Twitter phishing (see twishing)
two-tier ratio - Rate structure with separate charges
for on-net and off-net cities, that is cities served and not
served directly by the Sprint network.
two-way circuit - (1) A circuit in which information
signals in both directions are carried by the same two-wire
path. (2) A short-distance channel using a single send/receive
pathway, usually two copper wires, connecting a telephone to a
switch.
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U
U-M IT Communications Advisory Committee - A committee
with cross campus representation that makes recommendations to
IT Communications Services on product direction.
U-M Backbone Interconnect Network(UMBIN) - The network
which attaches Ann Arbor campus backbones to each other and the
Internet.
UMnet - The portion(s) of the University of Michigan
data network administered by ITD. At this time it includes the
ITD FDDI Backbone, ITD Off Campus Backbone and UMBIN.
UMnet Admin - UMnet Administration. The ITD group that
administrates UMnet.
unattended operation - Transmission and/or reception
that is controlled automatically and does not require a human
operator.
uniform call distributor (UCD) - Device located at the
telephone office or with a PABX which distributes incoming calls
evenly among stations or agents.
uniform service order code (USOC) - Information
encoded for billing purposes by the local telephone company;
typically used on service orders and service equipment records.
unipolar - (1) Neutral transmission of teletypewriter
signals, where current indicates a mark and no current means a
space signal. (2) Logical opposites are represented by the same
electrical voltage polarity.
universal product code (UPC) - Printed bar-code label
format on product packages.
usage - (1) Measure of trunk or equipment occupancy in
telephone traffic engineering. [One trunk busy for an hour
carries one erlang of traffic. Usage is measured in CCSs
(hundred-call seconds) where 36 CCS per hours = one erlang.] See
erlang.
usage sensitive pricing (USP) - Charge for service
based on the amount of use.
usage sensitive service - Pay-for-what-you-use method
of charging for local calls.
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V
value added network (VAN) - A public data
communications network that provides basic transmission
facilities (generally leased by the VAN vendor from a common
carrier) plus additional, enhanced services such as computerized
switching, temporary data storage, error detection and
correction, electronic mail service and packet switching.
variance - Difference between the expected or planned
and the actual.
vertical marketing - (1) Focusing resources on
carefully selected industry groups. (2) Offers designed and
marketed to appeal to a specific industry group, such as:
financial which contains banks, mutual funds and insurance
companies.
very severe burst (VSB) - Interval between 2.5 and 10
seconds in which the background error rate (BER) exceeds 10-2;
can alternatively be defined as three to ten consecutive
severely errored seconds (SES).
via net loss (VNL) - The lowest loss in decibel (dB)
at which a trunk facility can be operated considering
limitations of echo, crosstalk, noise and singing.
video - Data displayed on the screen of a CRT.
videoconferencing - Two-way telecommunications service
with live transmission of pictures and speech of conference
participants transmitted between two or more locations.
videotex - An interactive information network that
enables a home user with a telephone line, a decoder and
television to access a mainframe computer which then displays
both text and graphic information.
virtual banding - (1) A means of assigning calls to
bands determined by originating and terminating NPAs, rather
than by assigned circuits. (2) A method of rating calls based on
distance sensitive pricing developed for NPA-to-NPA pairs.
voice activation - Method in which spoken messages,
rather than electrical signals from a telephone keypad, initiate
call processing.
voice connecting arrangement - An access arrangement
provided by the telcos to accommodate the connections of
non-carrier provided voice terminal equipment to the public
switched telephone network.
voice frequency (VF) - Any of the frequencies in the
300 to 3400 Hz band which must be transmitted to reproduce the
voice with reasonable fidelity.
voice grade - (1) An access line suitable for voice,
low-speed data, facsimile or telegraph service. (2) A line that
generally has a frequency range of about 300 to 3000 Hz.
voice grade facility (VGF) - Circuit designed to DDD
network standards, making it suitable for voice, low-speed data,
facsimile or telegraph service.
voice recognition - System of sound sensors that
translate the tones of the human voice into computer commands to
access or accomplish some service.
voice response unit (VRU) - Device that accepts a
coded request for data, composes a coded response and interprets
the coded response into locations of stored vocabulary as
output.
voice syntheses - Computer generated sounds that
simulate the human voice.
voice-grade channel - Typically a telephone circuit
used for voice communications and accommodating frequencies from
300 to 3000 Hz. Up to 10,000 Hz can be transmitted.
voiceprint - (1) Technique for verifying an
individual's identity by his or her speech pattern. (2) An
individually distinctive pattern of certain speech
characteristics that can be mapped electromagnetically; the
verbal equivalent of a fingerprint.
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W
wait state - Condition of a central processing unit
when all operations are suspended.
warm boot - Reloading the operating system or
initializing the computer after it has been on, both without
turning the computer off. See booting.
wats access line (WAL) - A line class marked as a WATS
line, provided from an equal access end office. The WATS access
line provides the same service and features as a normal business
line (unless mixed interstate and intrastate usage is prohibited
by the state regulatory body), but incurs access charges which
are different from those incurred for a normal business line.
wats access line extension (WALE) - A WAL provided to
a customer served by an end office which has not been converted
to equal access through an end office which has been converted.
wide area telecommunications service (WATS) - A
special direct distance dialing (toll) service whereby a
subscriber installs a dedicated line arranged for either inward
or outward calls (not both) between the customer's premises and
a specific geographic area. Monthly charges are based on the
size of the area in which the calls are placed, not on the
number or length of calls.
wideband - Facilities or circuits where bandwidths are
greater than that required for one voice channel.
wire center - Physical structure that houses one or
more central office switching systems.
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X
X. - A series of CCITT recommendations for data
transmission over public data networks.
X.21 - A CCITT recommendation which specifies a
general purpose interface between data circuit-terminating
equipment for synchronous operation on public data networks.
X.25 - A CCITT recommendation which specifies an
interface between data terminal equipment for terminals
operating in the packet mode on public data network.
X.75 - A CCITT recommendation which specifies the
protocol used to communicate between packet switched networks.
X.121 - A CCITT recommendation which specifies an
international numbering plan for addressing data networks.
X.400 - A CCITT recommendation which specifies an
international numbering plan for public message handling
systems.
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Y
Y/C - A form of component video signals. [Luminance (Y)/
Chrominance (C).]
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Acronyms
AAR
- Automatic Alternate Routing
AC
- Account Consultant
ACD
- Automatic Call Distributor
ACF
- Advanced Communications Function
ACK
- Acknowledge Character
ADCCP
- Advanced Data Communications
- Control Procedures
AFIPS
- American Federation of Information
- Processing Societies
AIOD
- Automatic Identification of Outward Dialing
ALC
- Access Line Charge
ANI
- Automatic Number Identification
ANSI
- American National Standards Institute
ARC
- Attached Resource Computer
ARS
- Automatic Route Selection
ARU
- Automatic Response Unit
ASA
- American Standards Association
ASCII
- American (National) Standard Code for
- Information Interexchange
ATB
- All Trunks Busy
ATC
- Adaptive Transform Coding
AVD
- Alternate Voice DATA
BBER
- Background Bit Error Rate
BCC
- Block Check Character
BCD
- Binary Coded Decimal
BER
- Bit Error Rate
BEX
- Broadband Exchange
BISYNC
- Binary Synchronous Transmission
BLERT
- Block Error Rate Test
BOC
- Bell Operating Company
bps
- Bits Per Second
BPV
- Bipolar Violations
BSC
- Binary Synchronous Transmission
BSOC
- Bell System Operating Company
BSP
- Business Systems Planning
BTAM
- Basic Telecommunications Access Method
CAD
- Computer Aided Design
CAI
- Computer Assisted Instruction
CAM
- Computer Aided Manufacturing
CCIS
- Common Channel Interoffice Signaling
CCITT
- Consultative Committee on International
- Telegraph and Telephone
CCS7
- Common Control Switching #7
CCSA
- Common Control Switching Arrangement
CGA
- Color Graphics Adaptor
CIF
- Common Intermediate Format
CIS
- Customer Information System
CO
- Central Office
COAM
- Customer Owned and Maintained
CODEC
- Coder-Decoder
COMSAT
- Communications Satellite Corporation
COS
- Class Of Service
CPE
- Customer Premises Equipment
CPH
- Cost Per Hour
CPM
- Cost Per Minute
CPS
- Characters Per Second
CPU
- Central Processing Unit
CRC
- Cyclic Redundancy Check
CRT
- Cathode Ray Tube
CSC
- Customer Support Center
CSMA
- Carrier Sense Multiple Access
CSMA/CD
- Carrier Sense Multiple Access
- with Collision Detection
CSU
- Channel Service Unit
DAA
- Data Access Arrangement
DAL
- Dedicated Access Line
DAV
- Data Above Voice
dB
- Decibel
DCA
- Distributed Communications Architecture
DCMS
- Digital Cross-Connect Management System
DCP
- Data Control Point
DCS
- Digital Cross-Connect System
DCT
- Discrete Cosine Transform
DCTS
- Dimension Custom Telephone Service
DDCMP
- Digital Data Communications Message Protocol
DDD
- Direct Distance Dialing
DDP
- Distributed Data Processing
DDS
- Dataphone Digital Service
DDS
- Digital Data Service
DES
- Data Encryption Standard
DHCP
- Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
DID
- Direct Inward Dialing
DLCM
- Digital Level Control Module
DMS
- Digital Multiplex System
DNA
- Digital Network Architecture
DNIS
- Dialed Number Identification Service
DOS
- Disk Operating System
DPI
- Dots Per Inch
DS
- Digital Signal
DS0
- Digital Signal level zero
DS1
- Digital Signal level one
DS3
- Digital Signal level three
DTE
- Digital Transmission Equipment
DTMF
- Dual Tone Multifrequency
EBCDIC
- External Binary Coded Decimal Interexchange Code
EDP
- Electronic Data Processing
EFS
- Error Free Seconds
EIA
- Electronic Industry Organization
EKTS
- Electronic Key Telephone Set
EML
- Expected Measured Loss
EO
- End Office
EPROM
- Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory
EPS
- Encapsulated PostScript
EPSCS
- Enhanced Private Switched Communication Service
ERL
- Echo Return Loss
ES
- Errored Second
ESF
- Extended Superframe Format
ESS
- Electronic Switching System
ETN
- Electronic Tandem Network
FCC
- Federal Communications Commission
FDM
- Frequency Division Multiplexing
FGA
- Feature Group A
FGB
- Feature Group B
FGC
- Feature Group C
FGD
- Feature Group D
FIFO
- First In-First Out
FMS
- Facilities Management System
FOT
- Fiber-Optic Terminal
FOTS
- Fiber-Optic Transmission System
FTS
- Federal Telecommunications System
FX
- Foreign Exchange
GIGO
- Garbage In, Garbage Out
Hz
- Hertz
IC
- Interexchange Carrier
ICA
- International Communications Association
IDN
- Integrated Digital Network
IMS/VS
- Information Management System/Virtual Storage
IMT
- Intermachine Trunk
INMARSAT
- International Maritime Satellite Organization
INTELSAT
- International Telecommunications
- Satellite Consortium
IOC
- Interoffice Carrier
IOT
- Interoffice Trunk
IPM
- Impulses Per Minute
IPS
- Invoice Processing System
IRC
- International Record Carrier
ISDN
- Integrated Services Digital Network
ISO
- International Organization for Standardization
ISP
- Internet Service Provider
ITU
- International Telecommunications Union
IXC
- Interexchange Carrier
k
- Kilo (1000 in decimal notation)
K
- 2 to the 10th power (1024 in decimal notation)
kb
- Kilobit
kbps
- Kilobit Per Second
kHz
- Kilohertz
LADT
- Local Area Data Transport
LAN
- Local Area Network
Laser
- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
LATA
- Local Access and Transport Area
LCD
- Liquid Crystal Diode
LCR
- Least Cost Routing
LDA
- Local Distribution Area
LDF
LEC
- Local Exchange Carrier
LED
- Light Emitting Diode
LLC
- Logical Line Control
LMU
- Line Monitor Unit
m
- Milli (one thousand or thousandth part)
M
- Mega (one million)
M/W
- Microwave
Mbps
- Megabits Per Second (or Million of Bits Per Second)
MDF
- Main Distribution Frame
MERS
- Most Economical Route Selection
MFJ
- Modified Final Judgement
MG
- Mastergroup
MHz
- Megahertz
MICR
- Magnetic Ink Character Recognition
modem
- Modulator/Demodulator
MOU
- Minutes of Use
MPS
- Message Processing System
MTS
- Message Telecommunications Service
MTTR
- Mean Time to Repair
MU
- Message Unit
mux
- Multiplexer
NADP
- North American Dialing Plan
NAM
- National Account Manager
NASM
- National Account Service Manager
NI
- Network Interface
NNX
- Network Numbering Exchange
NOC
- National Operations Center
NPA
- Number Plan Area
NS
- Nanosecond
NSC
- National Service Center
NSEC
- Nanosecond
NTSC
- National Television Standards Committee
NXX
- Network Numbering Exchange
OCC
- Other Common Carrier
OCR
- Optical Character Recognition
OEM
- Original Equipment Manufacturer
ONAL
- Off-Network Access Line
ONAT
- Off-Network Access Trunk
OPX
- Off-Premise Extension
OSI
- Open Systems Interconnection
PABX
- Private Automatic Branch Exchange
PAD
- Packet Assembler/Disassembler
PAL
- Phase Alternate Line
PAM
- Pulse Amplitude Modulation
PAX
- Private Automatic Exchange
PBX
- Private Branch Exchange
PCM
- Pulse Code Modulation
PDL
- Page Description Language
PDM
- Pulse Duration Modulation
PIN
- Personal Identification Number
Pixel
- Picture Element
PLSC
- Private Line Service Center
POP
- Point-of-Presence
POTS
- Plain Old Telephone Service
PROM
- Programmable Read-Only Memory
PSC
- Public Service Commission
PSN
- Public Switched Network
PTAT
- Private Transatlantic Telecommunications
PTT
- Postal, Telephone and Telegraph
PUC
- Public Utility Commission
QCIF
- Quarter Common Intermediate Format
QIP
- Quality Improvement Process
QTAM
- Queued Telecommunications Access Method
RAM
- Random Access Memory
RBOC
- Regional Bell Operating Company
RCC
- Radio Common Carrier
RCC
- Regional Control Center
RDPS
- Reverse Direction Protection Switching
RO
- Receives Only
ROM
- Read only Memory
Rx
- Receive
SCC
- Specialized Common Carrier
SCSI
- Small Computer System Interface
SDIP
- Service Delivery Improvement Process
SES
- Severely Errored Second
SG
- Supergroup
SIC
- Standard Industrial Classification
SICC
- Standard Industrial Classification Code
SMDR
- Station Message Detail Recording
SMG
- Supermastergroup
SNA
- Systems Network Architecture
SNMP
- Simple Network Management Protocol
SPC
- Single Point Connection
SPC
- Stored Program Controlled
SS7
- Signaling System #7
STP
- Signaling Transfer Point
SX
- Simplex Signaling
T1
- Same as DS1
TAP
- T1 Access Partitioning
- (AT&T service marked product)
TBD
- To Be Determined
TCAM
- Telecommunications Access Method
TCC
- Telecommunications Common Carrier
TDM
- Time Division Multiplex
TEHO
- Tail End Hop Off
TIFF
- Tagged Image File Format
TMRS
- Traffic Measurement and Recording System
TOC
- Technical Operations Center
TT
- Trunk Type
TTL
- Transistor-Transistor Logic
TTTN
- Tandem Tie-Trunk Network
TUR
- Trunk Utilization Report
TWX
- Teletypewriter Exchange Service
Tx
- Transmit
UCD
- Uniform Call Distributor
UDLC
- Universal Data Link Control
UMBIN
- U-M Backbone Interconnect Network
UPC
- Universal Product Code
USOC
- Uniform Service Order Code
USP
- Usage Sensitive Pricing
USP
- Usage Surge Protector
VANS
- Value-Added Network Service
VAN
- Value-Added Network
VAPC
- Vector Adaptive Predictive Coding
VF
- Voice Frequency
VGF
- Voice Grade Facility
VNL
- Via Net Loss
VPNSM
- Virtual Private Network
VRU
- Voice Response Unit
VSB
- Very Severe Burst
WAL
- WATS Access Line
WALE
- WATS Access Line Extension
WAN
- Wide Area Network
WATS
- Wide Area Telecommunications Service
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