D-Link DGL-4300 Product Manual - Page 63
Megabyte, Megabits per second, Modem, Multicast, NetBEUI, NetBIOS, Netmask, NetWare, Network - extender
UPC - 790069272554
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Page 63 highlights
Megabyte - MB Megabits per second - Mbps MIB - Management Information Base is a set of objects that can be managed by using SNMP Modem - A device that Modulates digital signals from a computer to an analog signal in order to transmit the signal over phone lines. It also Demodulates the analog signals coming from the phone lines to digital signals for your computer MPPE - Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption is used to secure data transmissions over PPTP connections MTU - Maximum Transmission Unit is the largest packet that can be transmitted on a packet-based network like the Internet Multicast - Sending data from one device to many devices on a network N NAT - Network Address Translation allows many private IP addresses to connect to the Internet, or another network, through one IP address NetBEUI - NetBIOS Extended User Interface is a Local Area Network communication protocol. This is an updated version of NetBIOS NetBIOS - Network Basic Input/Output System Netmask - Determines what portion of an IP address designates the Network and which part designates the Host NetWare - A Server Software developed by Novell Network Interface Card - A card installed in a computer or built onto the motherboard that allows the computer to connect to a network Network later - The third layer of the OSI model which handles the routing of traffic on a network Network Time Protocol - Used to synchronize the time of all the computers in a network NIC - Network Interface Card NTP - Network Time Protocol O OFDM - Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing is the modulation technique for both 802.11a and 802.11g OSI - Open Systems Interconnection is the reference model for how data should travel between two devices on a network OSPF - Open Shortest Path First is a routing protocol that is used more than RIP in larger scale networks because only changes to the routing table are sent to all the other routers in the network as opposed to sending the entire routing table at a regular interval, which is how RIP functions 63 Appendix D-Link Systems, Inc.