splitterless

A type of DSL installation where no splitter is installed,

 

saving the cost of a service call by the telephone compa-

 

ny. Instead, each jack in the home carries both voice and

 

data, requiring a microfilter for each telephone to prevent

 

interference from the data signal. ADSL is usually split-

 

terless; if you are unsure if your installation has a splitter,

 

ask your DSL provider. See also splitter, microfilter.

subn­et

A subnet is a portion of a network. The subnet is dis-

 

tinguished from the larger network by a subnet mask

 

which selects some of the computers of the network

 

and excludes all others. The subnet’s computers remain

 

physically connected to the rest of the parent network,

 

but they are treated as though they were on a separate

 

network. See also network mask.

subn­et mask

A mask that defines a subnet. See also network mask.

TCP

See TCP/IP.

TCP/IP

Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol The basic

 

protocols used on the Internet. TCP is responsible for di-

 

viding data up into packets for delivery and reassembling

 

them at the destination, while IP is responsible for deliv-

 

ering the packets from source to destination. When TCP

 

and IP are bundled with higher-level applications such as

 

HTTP, FTP, Telnet, etc., TCP/IP refers to this whole suite of

 

protocols.

Teln­et

An interactive, character-based program used to access a

 

remote computer. While HTTP (the web protocol) and FTP

 

only allow you to download files from a remote computer,

 

Telnet allows you to log into and use a computer from a

 

remote location.

TFTP

Trivial File Transfer Protocol. A protocol for file transfers,

 

TFTP is easier to use than File Transfer Protocol (FTP) but

 

not as capable or secure.

TTL

Time To Live A field in an IP packet that limits the life

 

span of that packet. Originally meant as a time duration,

 

the TTL is usually represented instead as a maximum hop

 

count; each router that receives a packet decrements this

 

field by one. When the TTL reaches zero, the packet is

 

discarded.

twisted pair

The ordinary copper telephone wiring long used by tel-

 

ephone companies. It contains one or more wire pairs

 

twisted together to reduce inductance and noise. Each

 

telephone line uses one pair. In homes, it is most often

 

installed with two pairs. For Ethernet LANs, a higher

 

grade called Category 3 (CAT 3) is used for 10BASE-

 

T networks, and an even higher grade called Category

 

5 (CAT 5) is used for 100BASE-T networks. See also

 

10BASE-T, 100BASE-T, Ethernet.

upstream

The direction of data transmission from the user to the

YML754 Rev1

NB5Plus4/W User Guide

www.netcomm.com.au

105

Page 105
Image 105
Nortel Networks NB5PLUS4/W manual Tcp/Ip, Tftp, Ttl