Resolution

The density of dots attained by an output device, such as a fax, scanner, or printer, in producing an image. Expressed in terms of dots per inch (dpi). Low resolution causes font characters and graphics to have a jagged appearance. Higher resolution means smoother curves and angles, as well as a better match to traditional typeface designs. Resolution values are represented by horizontal data and vertical data (e.g., 600 x 600 dpi).

Rotary Pulse

Also called "pulse dial." On a rotary pulse telephone, a dial is turned to send pulses to the telephone switching system.

RX

Abbreviation for "Reception/Receiving."

RX Password

The RX Password is needed to send or receive documents to and from a fax machine that uses ITU-T standard subaddresses and passwords. If the passwords on both ends do not match, the fax is not transmitted. Numbers of up to 20 digits, including spaces, asterisks (*), and pound signs (#), can be used for the RX Password.

S

Scanning Area

The area that is actually scanned is slightly smaller than the size of the original document, so words or images near the edges of the document may not be scanned. Therefore, allow some margin space on all sides of the document that you are sending.

Sender's Name

Your personal or organization's name. The sender's name, fax number, date, and time sent are printed on each page that you send. You can register up to 99 sender names that are selected using the TTI selector, before sending.

Sequential Broadcast

Sequential Broadcasting enables you to send a scanned document to up to 256 destinations simultaneously. If you frequently send documents to the same destinations, it is highly recommended that you register the numbers as a group in a one-touch button for group dialing.

SMB

Server Message Block. A protocol that provides file and printer sharing over a network for Windows computers.

Appendix

9

Glossary 9-19