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Definity ECS Admin for Network Connectivity.pdf - TextFiles.com

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T-carrier<br />

Glossary<br />

T-carrier<br />

A hierarchy of digital voice- and data-transmission systems used in North<br />

America and based on multiples of the capacity of the T-1 line.<br />

tandem switch<br />

A switch within an electronic tandem network (ETN) that provides the logic to<br />

determine the best route <strong>for</strong> a network call, possibly modifies the digits<br />

outpulsed, and allows or denies certain calls to certain users.<br />

tandem-through<br />

The switched connection of an in<strong>com</strong>ing trunk to an outgoing trunk without<br />

human intervention.<br />

tandem tie-trunk network (TTTN)<br />

A private network that interconnects several customer switching systems.<br />

TCP<br />

Transmission Control Protocol — Transport layer; Connection oriented,<br />

reliable.<br />

TCP/IP<br />

Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A standard that lets different<br />

<strong>com</strong>puter hardware and different operating systems (such as PCs, Apple<br />

<strong>com</strong>puters, UNIX workstations, and mainframes) <strong>com</strong>municate with each other<br />

over a network. TCP/IP is the most <strong>com</strong>plete, most widely accepted network<br />

protocol currently available.<br />

TDM<br />

See time-division multiplexing.<br />

tie trunk<br />

A tele<strong>com</strong>munications channel that directly connects two private switching<br />

systems.<br />

time-division multiplexing<br />

A way of interleaving digitized voice, video, and/or data so that several calls<br />

can be sent concurrently over the same spread of frequencies. TDM systems<br />

distribute the available bandwidth across a series of time slots and divide each<br />

input stream into a set of samples. They then assign successive time slots to the<br />

first sample in each input stream. They repeat the process until all time slots<br />

have been assigned or all inputs sent. At the far end, the receiver demultiplexes<br />

the transmission and reconstructs the original sequence of samples.<br />

Time-division multiplexing is typically used on circuit-switched networks.<br />

<strong>Admin</strong>istration <strong>for</strong> <strong>Network</strong> <strong>Connectivity</strong><br />

555-233-504 — Issue 1 — April 2000 CID: 77730<br />

487

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