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INTELLINET NETWORK 524988 User Manual User Manual

Page 66

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GLOSSARY

ISP: Internet Service Provider. An ISP is a business that provides connectivity to

the Internet for individuals and other businesses or organizations.
LAN: Local Area Network. A LAN is a group of computers and devices connected

together in a relatively small area (such as a house or an office). Your home network

is considered a LAN.
MAC Address: MAC stands for Media Access Control. A MAC address is the

hardware address of a device connected to a network, and is a unique identifier for

a device with an Ethernet interface. It is composed of two parts: three bytes of data

that corresponds to the Manufacturer ID (unique for each manufacturer), and three

bytes that are often used as the product’s serial number.
NAT: Network Address Translation. This process allows all of the computers on your

home network to use one IP address. Using the broadband router’s NAT capability,

you can access the Internet from any computer on your home network without

having to purchase more IP addresses from your ISP.
PPPoE: Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet. Point-to-Point Protocol is a secure

data transmission method originally created for dial-up connections; PPPoE is for

Ethernet connections. PPPoE relies on two widely accepted standards, Ethernet

and the Point-to-Point Protocol. It is a communications protocol for transmitting

information over Ethernet between different manufacturers.
Protocol: A protocol is a set of rules for interaction agreed upon between multiple

parties so that when they interface with each other based on such a protocol, the

interpretation of their behavior is well-defined and can be made objectively, without

confusion or misunderstanding.
Router: A router is an intelligent network device that forwards packets between

different networks based on network layer address information such as IP addresses.
Subnet Mask: A subnet mask, which may be a part of the TCP/IP information

provided by your ISP, is a set of four numbers (e.g., 255.255.255.0) configured like

an IP address. It’s used to create IP address numbers used only within a particular

network (as opposed to valid IP address numbers recognized by the Internet,

which must be assigned by InterNIC).
TCP/IP, UDP: Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol and Unreliable

Datagram Protocol are the standard protocols for data transmission over the Internet.

Both TCP and UDP are transport layer protocols. TCP performs proper error

detection and error recovery, and thus is reliable. UDP, on the other hand, is not

reliable. They both run on top of the IP (Internet Protocol), a network layer protocol.
WAN: A Wide Area Network connects computers located in geographically

separate areas (e.g., different buildings, cities, countries). The Internet is a wide

area network.