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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.
1. özel aygıt tanır ve ilgi belirli paketleri şifresini çözmek için ağ trafiğini izleme amacıyla tasarlanmış. 2. bir yazılım paketi, tanımak ve ilgi belirli paketleri şifresini çözmek genel amaçlı bir bilgisayar sağlar. Not: Paket burnunu çekmek normal olarak sistem yöneticileri tarafından ağ yönetim ve teşhis için kullanılır, ancak zaman zaman bilgisayar korsanları tarafından bir kullanıcının parolasını veya kredi kartı numarası çalmak gibi yasadışı amaçlar için kullanılır. 3. içinde InfoSec, eş yysniffer.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A defined geographic area identified by a unique three-digit code used in the North American Number Plan Area. Note 1: Defined geographic area could mean the entire area encompassed by the North American Numbering Plan Area (for 800, 888, 877 codes, etc. ) Note 2: By virtue of the overlay concept deployed in some states, there may be two (or more) NPAs assigned to the same defined geographic area. 2. Numbering Plan Area, also called area code. An NPA is the 3-digit code that occupies the A, B, and C positions in the 10-digit NANP format that applies throughout the NANP Area. NPAs are of the form NXX, where N represents the digits 2-9 and X represents any digit 0-9. In the NANP, NPAs are classified as either geographic or non-geographic. A) Geographic NPAs are NPAs which correspond to discrete geographic areas within the NANP Area. B) Non-geographic NPAs are NPAs that do not correspond to discrete geographic areas, but which are instead assigned for services with attributes, functionalities, or requirements that transcend specific geographic boundaries. The common examples are NPAs in the N00 format, e. G. , 800. ~
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A device that has as its critical component a metal wire or strip that will melt when heated by a prescribed (design) amperage, creating an open in the circuit of which it is a part, thereby protecting the circuit from an overcurrent condition. Note: Fuses are often characterized as "fast-blow" or "slow-blow," according to the time required for them to respond to an overcurrent condition. Fast-blow fuses open nearly instantaneously when exposed to an overcurrent condition. Slow-blow fuses can tolerate a transient overcurrent condition, but will open if the overcurrent condition is sustained. 2. In optical fiber technology, to join the endfaces of a pair of optical fibers by melting, i. E. , welding, the endfaces together.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A digital signal rate of 274. 176 Mb/s, corresponding to the North American T4 designator. 2. A digital signaling rate of 97. 728 Mb/s, corresponding to the Japanese T4 designator.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. bir dijital sinyal oranı 44. 736 mb/Kuzey Amerika T3 Belirleyicisi karşılık gelen s. 2. bir dijital sinyal gönderme hızı 32. 064 mb/Japon T3 Belirleyicisi karşılık gelen s.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. bir ağ dağıtım noktası. 2. bir sinyal tek noktadan kabul eder ve bir veya daha fazla puan için yeniden dağıtan aygıt.
Industry:Telecommunications
Bilgisayar ağ üzerinden dağıtılmış bir dosya sistemi. 2. bir dosya sistemi, tüm alt düzey ağ dosyalarını içeren tek bir bilgisayar.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A formal set of conventions governing the format and control of interaction among communicating functional units. Note: Protocols may govern portions of a network, types of service, or administrative procedures. For example, a data link protocol is the specification of methods whereby data communications over a data link are performed in terms of the particular transmission mode, control procedures, and recovery procedures. 2. In layered communications system architecture, a formal set of procedures that are adopted to facilitate functional interoperation within the layered hierarchy. 3. A set of rules and formats, semantic and syntactic, permitting information systems (IS's) to exchange information. 4. A set of semantic and syntactic rules that determine the behavior of entities in performing communication functions.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A formal state-transition model of a computer security policy that describes a formal set of access controls based on information sensitivity and subject authorizations. . 2. A formal state transition model of computer security policy that describes a set of access control rules. In this formal model, the entities in a computer system are divided into abstract sets of subjects and objects. The notion of a secure state is defined and it is proven that each state transition preserves security by moving from secure state to secure state; thus, inductively proving that the system is secure. A system state is defined to be "secure" if the only permitted access modes of subjects to objects are in accordance with a specific security policy. In order to determine whether or not a specific access mode is allowed, the clearance of a subject is compared to the classification of the object and a determination is made as to whether the subject is authorized for the specific access mode. The clearance/classification scheme is expressed in terms of a lattice. See also: Lattice, Simple Security Property, *-Property.
Industry:Telecommunications
1. A formalized set of software calls and routines that can be referenced by an application program in order to access supporting network services. 2. The interface between the application software and the application platform, across which all services are provided. The application program interface is primarily in support of application portability, but system and application interoperability are also supported by a communication API.
Industry:Telecommunications