- 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 convergence of the full range of access technologies encompassing mobility, normadicity, and roaming between networks.
Industry:Telecommunications
The conventional Internet name for a network or computer system, which name consists of a sequence of two or more groups of characters separated by periods; e.g., the "govinst. Com" groups of characters in the host name "www. Govinst. Com", where the ". Com" is the first-level domain name (or top-level domain name,) and the "govinst" characters represent the second level. Note: In the United States, nonprofit organizations are identified (with exceptions) by the suffix ". Org", government entities by ". Gov", educational institutions by ". Edu", commercial organizations are identified by the suffix ". Com", and military bodies by ". Mil". Outside of the United States, domain names contain an ISO-standard country code suffix to indicate the country of origin of the computer or network.
Industry:Telecommunications
The controlling or routing of signals in circuits to execute logical or arithmetic operations or to transmit data between specific points in a network. Note: Switching may be performed by electronic, optical, or electromechanical devices.
Industry:Telecommunications
The controlling of congestion in gateways by restricting every host to an equal share of gateway bandwidth. Note: Fair queuing does not distinguish between small and large hosts or between hosts with few active connections and those with many.
Industry:Telecommunications
The controlled deletion of stuffing bits from a stuffed digital signal, to recover the original signal. Synonyms negative justification, negative pulse stuffing.
Industry:Telecommunications
The control that coordinates functions of the signaling link, including signal unit delimitation, signal unit alignment, error detection, error correction, initial alignment, signaling link error monitoring, and flow control.
Industry:Telecommunications
The control of radiated and conducted energy such that emissions that are unnecessary for system, subsystem, or equipment operation are reduced, minimized, or eliminated. Note: Electromagnetic radiated and conducted emissions are controlled regardless of their origin within the system, subsystem, or equipment. Successful EMI control with effective susceptibility control leads to electromagnetic compatibility.
Industry:Telecommunications
The control of friendly electromagnetic emissions, such as radio and radar transmissions, for the purpose of preventing or minimizing their use by unintended recipients.
Industry:Telecommunications
The control of data handling operations--such as acquisition, analysis, translation, coding, storage, retrieval, and distribution of data--but not necessarily the generation and use of data.
Industry:Telecommunications
The continued provision of services and material necessary for the use and improvement of a system during its life cycle.
Industry:Telecommunications