When discussing networking, many of the words
and acronyms used can be quite confusing, this page aims to explain some
of the more frequently used terms.
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Access Port
The physical gateway between a customer's local loop and the
frame relay network.
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line
or ADSL
A new technology that allows more data to be sent over existing
copper telephone lines. ADSL supports data rates of from 1.5 to 9 Mbps
when receiving data (known as the downstream rate) and from 16 to 640
Kbps when sending data (known as the upstream rate).
Amplifier
A device used to boost the strength of an electronic or optical signal,
which is weakened (attenuated) as it passes through the transport network.
Amplifiers add gain to the signal by an amount equal to the loss in the
previous section of the network since last amplification.
Atlantic Crossing (AC-1)
Part of the Global Crossing network. AC-1 links the United States,
United Kingdom, Netherlands and Germany. It became operational in May
1998.
ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode)
A method of sending audio, visual and computer data at the same time over
one high-speed digital line.
Backhaul Capacity
Capacity on terrestrial fiber optic cables from undersea cable landing
stations to metropolitan areas.
Band
A range of frequencies between two defined limits.
Bandwidth
A measure of capacity of information-carrying capacity on a communications
channel. The difference between the high and low frequencies of a transmission
band, expressed in cycles per second (hertz) or in wavelengths (nanometers).
It is a measure of raw capacity without compression or coding of the information
signal. A voice transmission requires about 3 KHz and a TV channel about
6 MHz. Transmission capacity is expressed in bits per second. For example
megabits per second (Mbps) is a bit rate expressed in millions of bits
per second while gigabits per second (Gbps) is a bit rate expressed in
billions.
Narrowband: Less than or equal
to 64-kbps.
Wideband: Digital rates between
64-kbps and 1.544 Mbps (DSI) or 2.048-Mbps (E1)-LANs, bulk files transfer,
video conferencing, and multimedia.
Broadband: Greater than 44.736 Mbps
(D3) or 34.368-Mbps (E3).
BGP or Border Gateway
Protocol
A routing protocol used in interdomain routing in large networks to maintain
integrity of the network. It allows the routers to exchange only prespecified
information with prespecified routers in other domains.
Biderectional Line Switched Ring
Commonly referred to as BLSR. It is a method of SONET transport in
which half of the working network is sent counterclockwise over one fiber
and the other half is sent clockwise over another fiber. BLSR offers bandwidth
use advantages for distributed traffic in single-ring architectures.
Bit
A binary unit of information that can have either of two values, 0 or
1. Contraction of binary digit:
- kilobit = 1,000 bits
- megabit = 1 million bits
- gigabit = 1 billion bits
- terabit = 1 trillion bits
Bridge
A data communications device that connects two or more network segments
and forwards packets between them. It also amplifies the carrier signal,
and accepts data packets, (perhaps buffering them during periods of network
congestion) and forwards them.
Broadband
A transmission channel usually carrying a tremendous amount of information
at transmission speeds of 45 Mbps (45,000,000 bits per second) or greater.
Some facilities have transmission speeds in the billion of bits (gigabits
per second of Gbps).
- communications channel with a bandwidth
sufficiently large to carry voice, data and video on a signal channel.
- Any voice communications channel having
a bandwidth greater than a voice grade channel.
- · A bandwidth of 45 Mbps
can carry 672 voice connections.
- · In theory up to 64
telephone grade communication channels can be carried on one 6 MHz broadband
channel.
Burst Mode
A way of doing data transmission, usually faster than normal transmission
mode, in which a continuous block is transferred between main memory and
an input/output device without interruption until the transfer has been
completed. Characteristically, burst mode is sustainable for only limited
periods of time under special conditions.
Capacity
The information-carrying ability of a telecommunications system, as
defined by its design (number of fibers, system length, and optoelectronic
equipment) and its deployed equipment (amount of optoelectronics in the
station) and measured in bits per second. Capacity is sold in discrete
units, usually system interface levels such as DS-3's and STM-1's, that
in the aggregate are the equivalent of total system capacity.
Carrier
A third party provider of communications services by wire, fiber or radio.
Common Carrier: A private company offering
facilities or services to the general public on a non-discriminatory basis
and regulated as to market entry, practices, and rates by various Federal
and State authorities. Private Carrier:
Services provided for internal use and free of most common carrier regulations
to allow discrimination in service provision or pricing.
Channelization
The process of subdividing the bandwidth of a circuit into smaller
increments called channels. Typically, each channel carries an individual
transmission, e.g., a voice conversation or a data conversation
a computer-to-computer session. This process is accomplished through a
multiplexer, such as dense wavelength division multiplexers.
Challenge-Handshake Authentication
Protocol or CHAP
An authentication method that can be used when connecting to
an Internet Service Provider. CHAP allows you to log in to your provider
automatically, without the need for a terminal screen.
Common Carrier
A business authorized by the FCC to provide communications services
by wire or radio from place to place without influence of content. Services
are provided to the public on a non-discriminatory basis, and are regulated
by Title II of the Communications Act of 1934. Regulatory agencies are
the FCC and state public utility commissions.
Non-dominant carrier is one which has insufficient
market power to practice anti-competitive pricing.
Private carriers are not regulated by government
agencies and may charge whatever the market will bear.
Compression
Algorithm that minimizes the redundancy in the signal to be transmitted.
Cryptography
The process of concealing the contents of a message from all
except those who know the key. Cryptography is used to protect e-mail
messages, credit card information, and corporate data. As the Internet
and other forms of electronic communication become more prevalent, electronic
security is also becoming increasingly important.
Dark Wavelength
Refers to a virtual channel in a fiber optic system utilizing
DWDM. Each virtual channel is supported through a specific wavelength
of light, with many channels riding over the same fiber. Once the fiber
system is deployed and the DWDM equipment is activated, some of the wavelengths
may be activated immediately and others may be left dark for future needs.
When the need arises, those dark wavelengths are lit up.
Digital
Describes a method of storing, processing and transmitting information
through the use of distinct electronic or optic pulses representing the
binary digits 0 and 1. In communications they will modify a carrier at
a selected frequency. The precise signal transitions preclude any distortion
such as graininess or snow in the case of video transmission or static
or other background distortion in the case of audio transmission.
Digital Transmission
Method of storing, processing and transmitting information through
the use of distinct electronic or optical pulses that represent the binary
digits 0 and 1. Digital transmission and switching technologies employ
a sequence of these pulses to represent information as opposed to a continuously
variable analog signal. The precise digital numbers preclude any distortion
such as graininess or snow in the case of video transmission, or static
or other background distortion in the case of audio transmission.
Doped Fibers
Various impurities may be added to silica-based fiber optic strands
as they are constructed to achieve specifically desired transmission or
physical properties. Erbium-Doped Optical Fiber Amplifier (EDFA)
optical amplifiers use a section of optical fiber doped with the rare
earth erbium and optically pumped with a laser diode. It can amplify a
range of wavelengths at the same time surrounding a base wavelength of
1550 nm. Praseodymium-doped fibers produce a signal gain
of 30 dB in 1310 nm fibers.
DSI
A digital transmission hierarchy supporting 1.544 million bits per
second that may be used for "near-full motion" or compressed
video, data or voice circuits (24, 48, or 96).
DWDM (Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing)
A technique which employs more than one light source and detector operating
at different wavelengths and simultaneously transmits optical signals
through the same fiber while message integrity of each signal is preserved.
E-1
Similar to the North American T-1, E-1 is the European format
for digital transmission. E-1 carries signals at 2.048 Mbps (32 channels
at 64Kbps), versus the T-1, which carries signals at 1.544 Mbps (24 channels
at 64Kbps). E-1 and T-1 lines may be interconnected for international
use.
EDFA (Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifier)
A purely optical (as opposed to electronic) device used to boost an optical
signal. It contains several meters of glass fiber doped with erbium ions.
When the erbium ions are excited to a high energy state, the doped fiber
changes from a passive medium to an active amplifying medium.
Fault Tolerance
The ability of a system to respond gracefully to an unexpected
hardware or software failure. There are many levels of fault tolerance,
the lowest being the ability to continue operation in the event of a power
failure.
Fiber Kilometers
The number of route kilometers installed multiplied by the number of fiber
strands along the path.
Fiber Optics
Technology based on thin filaments of glass or other transparent
materials used as the medium for transmitting coded light pulses that
represent data, image and sound. Fiber-optic technology offers extremely
fast transmission speeds.
Full Duplex
The simultaneous transmission of data in both directions, used
when communicating between two computers. Full duplex is sometimes called
"Echo On" by some communications programs.
Gbps(Gigabit per second)
A data rate of 1 Gbps corresponds to 1,000 million bits per second.
High Level Data Link
Control or HDLC
A generic link layer protocol standard for point-to-point and
multi-point communications that is bit oriented and in which control codes
differ according to their bit positions and patterns.
High Performance Parallel Interface
or HIPPI
HIPPI is used to network supercomputers, high-end workstations
and peripherals using cross-bar type circuit switches. It provides for
transfer rates of 800 megabits a second over 32 twisted pair copper wires
(single HIPPI) and 1600 megabits a second over 64 pairs (double HIPPI).
Internet
A fabric of interconnected computer networks, originally known as
the DARPA network (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) connecting
government and academic sites. It currently links about 50 million people
worldwide who use it for everything from scientific research to simple
E-Mail.
Internet Protocol (IP) Address
An Internet address that is a unique number consisting of four
parts separated by dots, sometimes called a "dotted quad." For
example, 198.204.112.1. Every Internet computer has an IP address and
most computers also are assigned one or more domain names that are easier
to remember than the dotted quad.
Indefeasible Right of Use (IRU)
A measure of currency in the undersea cable business. The owner of an
IRU has the right to use the capacity for the time and bandwidth to which
the IRU applies.
ISP
Internet Service Provider.
ITU (International Telecommunications
Union)
The ITU is an intergovernmental agency of the United Nations within which
the public and private sectors cooperate for the development of telecommunications.
The ITU adopts international regulations governing the use of the radio
spectrum and develops standards to facilitate the interconnection of telecommunications
systems on a worldwide basis. It is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.
In 1996, the ITU comprised 185 Member States and 363 members (scientific
and industrial companies, public and private operators, broadcasters,
regional and international organizations active in three sectors: Radio
communications, Standardization and Development).
Lambda
The 11th letter of the Greek alphabet. Lambda is used as the
symbol for wavelength in lightwave systems. Fiber optic systems use multiple
wavelengths of light through dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM).
Each range of wavelength appears in a "window" roughly corresponding
to a color in the visible light spectrum.
Latency
The amount of time it takes a packet to travel from source to
destination. Together, latency and bandwidth define the speed and capacity
of a network.
Local Loop
The physical facility, leased from a LEC, which provides connectivity
between the customer's location and the carrier's point of presence.
Low Voltage Differential Signaling
or LVDS
A low noise, low power, low amplitude method for high-speed (gigabits
per second) data transmission over copper wire.
Mbps (Megabit per
second)
One Mbps corresponds to a data rate of 1,000,000 bits per second.
Media Distribution Centers or
MDCs
MDCs are part of GlobalCenter's digital distribution architecture
which bypasses the congested Internet infrastructure to provide enhanced
performance. GlobalCenter's standard MDC facilities are equipped with
state-of-the-art technology and provide the highest levels of security
and fault tolerance for our customer's servers.
Media Gateway Control protocol or
MGCP
A proposed control and signal standard for the conversion
of audio signals carried on telephone circuits to data packets carried
over the Internet or other packet networks. Unlike regular phones, IP
phones and devices are not fixed to a specific switch, so they must contain
processors that enable them to function independently from a central switching
location. MGCP eliminates the need for complex, processor-intense IP telephony
devices, thus simplifying and lowering the cost of these terminals.
Multicasting
The ability of one network node to send identical data to a number
of end servers on the multicast backbone. For large amounts of data, IP
multicasting is more efficient than normal Internet transmissions because
the server can broadcast a message to multiple recipients simultaneously.
Multilink Point-to-Point Protocol or
MP
MP allows multiple physical connections between two points to be combined
into a single logical connection called a bundle. MP supports dynamic
bandwidth allocation, which means that physical links can be added or
removed from the bundle as needed.
Multimedia
The electronic conversation between two or more people or groups of
people in different places using two or more types of digitally integrated
communication for voice, sound, text, data, graphics, video, image or
presence at the same time. Applications include conferencing, presentations,
training, referencing, games, etc.
Multiplexing
An electronic or optical process that combines two or more lower bandwidth
transmissions onto one higher bandwidth signal by splitting the total
available bandwidth into narrower bands (frequency division) or by allotting
a common channel to several transmitting sources one at a time in sequence
(time division).
Multipoint
Pertaining or referring to a communications line to which three or more
stations are connected. It implies that the line physically extends from
one station to another until all are connected.
MultiProtocol Label Switching or
MPLS
MPLS is a widely supported method of speeding up data
communication over combined IP/ATM networks. This improves the speed of
packet processing and enhances performance of the network.
Optical Fiber
Thin filaments of glass through which light beams are transmitted.
Enormous capacity, low-cost, low-power consumption, small space, lightweight,
insensitivity to electromagnetic interference characterize this transport
media.
PTTs (Post, Telephone
and Telegraph companies)
International telecommunications carriers which are generally under the
control of the government in a country that has not yet privatized its
telecommunication markets.
Packet
Generic term for a bundle of data, organized in a specific way for transmission.
A packet consists of the data to be transmitted and certain control information,
including the destination address.
Packet Switching
A process where messages are broken into finite-sized packets that are
always accepted by the network. The message packets are sent across different
circuit paths. The packets are reassembled into the original message at
the end of the circuit.
Pipelining
In networking, pipelining is a technique used at the transport layer or
data link layer in a layered network architecture that allows for the
transmission of multiple frames without waiting to see if they are acknowledged
on an individuals basis.
Point of Presence (POP)
The physical location within a LATA where an interexchange carrier's circuits
interconnect with the local lines of telephone companies in that LATA.
Polling
Making continuous requests for data from another device. For example,
modems that support polling can call another system and request data.
Protocols
Computer rules that provide uniform specifications so that computer hardware
and operating systems can communicate.
Repeater
-
- Equipment that receives a low-power
signal, possibly converting it from light to electrical form, amplifying
it or retiming and reconstructing it for transmission. It may need
to be reconverted to light for retransmission.
- An optoelectrical device used at each
end and occasionally intermediate points of exceptionally long fiber
optic span. Optical input is converted to electrical form to restore
a clean signal, which drives lasers that fully restores the optical
signal at the original signal strength.
Requests for Comments
Internet standards that have developed within the Internet community since
1969. They have grown to become a large series of numbered Internet informational
documents and standards widely followed by commercial software and freeware
in the Internet and Unix communities. Few RFCs are standards but all Internet
standards are recorded in RFCs. Perhaps the single most influential RFC
has been RFC 822, the Internet electronic-mail format standard. RFCs are
unusual in that they are floated by technical experts acting on their
own initiative and reviewed by the Internet at large, rather than formally
promulgated through an institution such as ANSI (American National Standards
Institute). For this reason, they remain known as RFCs even after they
have been adopted as standards.
Route Kilometers
The number of route kilometers installed.
Router
A network device that connects two similar networks having the
same network protocol. It also chooses the best path between two networks
when there are multiple paths.
RFS (Ready for Service)
The data of provisional acceptance or commercial service of a cable system.
STM (Synchronous TransferMode)
New term for traditional TDM switching to distinguish it from ATM.
STM-1
The largest standard circuit unit of capacity, which consists of 155,500
kbps (equal to 155 Mbps). Thus, each Gbps contains enough capacity for
6.4 STM-1 circuits. While capacity is sold to the largest telecommunications
companies in minimum investment units equal to one STM-1 unit, most telecommunications
companies buy smaller units at a price higher than the equivalent STM-1
price.
Serial Line Internet Protocol or
SLIP
An Internet protocol which is used to run IP over serial lines such as
telephone circuits. It allows a packet to traverse multiple networks on
the way to its final destination.
Time Division Multiplex
or TDM
A technique for transmitting a number of separate data, voice and/or video
signals simultaneously over one communications medium by quickly interleaving
a piece of each signal one after another.
VoIP
VoIP stands for "voice over IP," which is voice communications
transmitted over the Internet.
Wavelength
The distance between two crests of a signal or a carrier and is measured
in terms of meters, millimeters, nanometers, etc. In lightwave applications,
because of the extremely high frequencies, wavelength is measured in nanometers.
Wavelength Division Multiplexing
or WDM
A way of increasing the information-carrying capacity of an optical
fiber by simultaneously operating at more than one wavelength. With WDM
you can multiplex signals by transmitting them at different wavelengths
through the same fiber.
xDSL
A term referring to a variety of new Digital Subscriber Line technologies.
Some of these varieties are asymmetric with different data rates in the
downstream and upstream directions. Others are symmetric. Downstream speeds
range from 384 kbps (or "SDSL") to 1.5-8 Mbps (or "ADSL").
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