Mbps

Abbreviation for Megabits per second, or one million bits

 

per second. Network data rates are often expressed in

 

Mbps.

Microfilter

In splitterless deployments, a microfilter is a device that

 

removes the data frequencies in the DSL signal, so that

 

telephone users do not experience interference (noise)

 

from the data signals. Microfilter types include in-line (in-

 

stalls between phone and jack) and wall-mount (tele-

 

phone jack with built-in microfilter). See also splitterless.

NAT

Network Address Translation A service performed by

 

many routers that translates your network’s publicly

 

known IP address into a Private IP address for each com-

 

puter on your LAN. Only your router and your LAN know

 

these addresses; the outside world sees only the public IP

 

address when talking to a computer on your LAN.

NAT rule

A defined method for translating between public and pri-

 

vate IP addresses on your LAN.

network

A group of computers that are connected together, al-

 

lowing them to communicate with each other and share

 

resources, such as software, files, etc.A network can be

 

small, such as a LAN, or very large, such as the Internet.

n­etwork mask

A network mask is a sequence of bits applied to an IP

 

address to select the network ID while ignoring the host

 

ID. Bits set to 1 mean “select this bit” while bits set to 0

 

mean “ignore this bit.” For example, if the network mask

 

255.255.255.0 is applied to the IP address 100.10.50.1,

 

the network ID is 100.10.50, and the host ID is 1. See

 

also binary, IP address, subnet

NIC

Network Interface Card An adapter card that plugs into

 

your computer and provides the physical interface to your

 

network cabling, which for Ethernet NICs is typically an

 

RJ-45 connector. See Ethernet, RJ-45.

packet

Data transmitted on a network consists of units called

 

packets. Each packet contains a payload (the data), plus

 

overhead information such as where it came from (source

 

address) and where it should go (destination address).

pingg­

Packet Internet (or Inter-Network) Groper A program

 

used to verify whether the host associated with an IP

 

address is online. It can also be used to reveal the IP ad-

 

dress for a given domain name.

port

A physical access point to a device such as a computer

 

or router, through which data flows into and out of the

 

device.

POTS

Plain Old Telephone Service Traditional analog telephone

 

service using copper telephone lines. Pronounced pots.

 

See also PSTN.

POTS splitter

See splitter.

YML754 Rev1

NB5Plus4/W User Guide

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