Sender Identification (= Header)

The telephone number and name of the sender as well as the date and time of the fax transmission appear in the upper margin of each received fax.

Sending to Multiple Recipients (= Broadcast- ing)

With this function, you can send a fax message to multiple recipients.

Telephone number suppression (CLIR)

If you call a subscriber, your number appears on the display of the person whom you are calling. You can switch off this function and suppress your number (Caller Line identification Restriction, CLIR).

Time Stamp

The exact date and time of receipt appear in the page header of each received fax. A memory buffer guarantees that exact data are issued even after a power loss. In this way, you can verify exactly when a fax has reached you.

Tone Dialling (= Dual Tone Multi-Frequency)

In many countries, tone dialling has replaced pulse dial- ling, in which each number was sent as a corresponding number of pulses. With tone dialling, a specific tone is assigned to each key (referred to as DTMF tones).

Toner Level Memory

Your device registers the extent of toner used for every print-out and calculates the toner level of the toner cartridge on that basis. The toner level is stored in each toner cartridge. You can use different toner cartridges as well as display the respective toner level of the toner cartridge.

Transfer Speed

CCITT/ITU has published international standards for the transmission of data over telephone lines. All short names begin with V, so these are also referred to as V standards. The most important transmission speeds for fax transmissions are: V.17—7.200 to 14.400 bps, V.21—max. 300 bps, V.22—max. 1.200 bps, V.22 bis— max. 2.400 bps, V.27 ter—max. 4.800 bps, V.29—max. 9.600 bps, V.32 bis—max. 14.400 bps, V.34—max. 33.600 bps

TWAIN

(Tool Without an Interesting Name) With the TWAIN scanner driver you can access the device and scan documents from any application which supports this stand- ard.

USB

Universal Serial Bus (computer port)

UTC

Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) Coordinated Universal Time is the current standardised universal time used. Starting from Greenwich in London (Zero Merid- ian), the world is split into time zones. These time zones are indicated with a deviance from UTC (in hours) for instance UTC+1 for Central European Time (CET)

Warm-Up Phase

Normally, the device is in the energy saving mode (see

 

Energy Saving Mode). In the warm-up phase, the device

 

heats up the printing unit until it has reached the neces-

 

sary operating temperature, after which the copy or fax

EN

can be printed out.

Glossary · Sender Identification (= Header)

85