Glossary

Network

Network address

Network password

Off-hook dialling On-hook dialling One-Touch dialling Overlap Printing

Panasonic Super Smoothing

Polling

Polling password

POP (Post Office Protocol)

Power Saver Mode

Print Collation

Print reduction modes

Program keys

Protocol

PSTN

Receiving password Relay Address Relay Network Relay Station

Relayed Transmission

Relayed Transmission

Report

RESOLUTION

Router (Gateway)

Selective reception

Any time you connect 2 or more computers together so that they can share resources, you have a computer network.

Connect 2 or more networks together and you have an internet.

An individual 4-digit addressing number assigned to a One-Touch/ Abbreviated number that identifies a particular station in a relay network.

A 4-digit password assigned to a network address to prevent unauthorized stations from accessing a relay station.

The direct dialling of a telephone number with the handset out of the cradle or "off the hook." The direct dialling of a telephone number with the handset in the cradle or "on the hook." The ability to dial an entire telephone number by pressing one key.

Documents too long to be reduced are automatically printed on two pages with approximately 10 mm overlap.

An electronic image enhancement (Panasonic Super Smoothing) that will create a particular pattern for the improvement of copy quality.

The ability to retrieve a document from another machine.

A 4-digit programmed code that enables the security of a document being polled.

POP refers to the way email software such as Eudora or your machine gets email from a mail server.

You must always have a POP account that you tell your email software to use to retrieve your mail.

To reduce the power consumption of the machine in standby, select the time period to turn OFF the high temperature fuser unit when the printer is idle.

The ability to stack received documents in the correct order.

The methods used to determine how an incoming document will be reduced to print onto the paper loaded in your machine.

Keys that are defined for storing a sequence of stations to be dialled or polled.

A protocol is the special set of rules for communicating that the end points in a telecommunication connection use when they send signals back and forth. Both end points must recognize and observe the protocol.

Public Switched Telephone Network. Network of interconnected switching equipment and transmission facilities.

A 4-digit password that is checked before a document is received.

A 3-digit code that identifies your machine is programmed in a relay network. A group of machines that communicate via a relay station.

A certain type of machine that can store and forward documents to an end receiving station and/or a relay station in another relay network.

Your machine can not be used as a relay station.

Sending a document to a relay station, which in turn, sends the document to the end receiving station.

A report that contains information regarding the last document transmission to a relay station.

Relates to the number of dots scanned or printed per certain square. The quality of the image increases as the number of dots per certain square increases.

A special purpose computer (or software package) that handles the connection between 2 or more networks.

Gateways act like traffic cops, they spend their time looking at the destination addresses of the packets passing through them and deciding which route to send them on.

A function that can be set so that your unit will receive from only those machines programmed into your dialler.

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Panasonic DX-600 appendix 250, Router Gateway Selective reception