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Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions
Industry: Telecommunications
Number of terms: 29235
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
ATIS is the leading technical planning and standards development organization committed to the rapid development of global, market-driven standards for the information, entertainment and communications industry.
The bits of a message signal unit that carry information particular to a certain user transaction and always contain a label.
Industry:Telecommunications
The bits of a link status signal unit that indicate one of the major signaling link states.
Industry:Telecommunications
The bit-error-ratio requirement allocated to the respective segments of a communications system, such as trunking, switching, access, and terminal devices, in a manner that satisfies the specified system end-to-end bit-error-ratio requirement for transmitted traffic.
Industry:Telecommunications
The Bell-La Padula security model rule allowing a subject read access to an object, only if the security level of the subject dominates the security level of the object.
Industry:Telecommunications
The bearer/signaling connection between the radio port intermediary and the radio port controller.
Industry:Telecommunications
The basic unit of measure for expressing absorbed radiant energy per unit mass of material. Note 1: A rad corresponds to an absorption of 0. 01 J/kg, i.e., 100 ergs/g. Note 2: The absorbed radiant energy heats, ionizes, and/or destroys the material upon which it is incident.
Industry:Telecommunications
The basic logical building block signal of synchronous optical networks (SONET. ) The STS-1 signal has a bit rate of 51. 840 Mb/s.
Industry:Telecommunications
The band of frequencies (approximately 20 Hz to 20 kHz) that, when transmitted as acoustic waves, can be heard by the normal human ear.
Industry:Telecommunications
The basic characteristics of a code: its length and generic representation.
Industry:Telecommunications
The avoidance of any type of transmission, emission, or radiation by any means, including radiation from receiving equipment. Note: An example of communications silence is the maintaining of a listening watch only if the receivers do not radiate beyond a specified level.
Industry:Telecommunications