Printer Access Protocol - meaning and definition. What is Printer Access Protocol
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What (who) is Printer Access Protocol - definition

INTEROPERABILITY PROTOCOL USED IN WIRELESS TELEPHONY
Generic access protocol; Generic Access Profile

Printer Access Protocol      
<networking, protocol, printer> (PAP) A protocol used in Mac OS Appletalk to provide bi-directional communication between PostScript printers and the client computer. (1999-03-02)
simplex printer         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
<communications> A term applied by Western Union Telegraph Company to teletypewriters that are not part of a multiplex system. They usually provided for alternate transmission in both directions. If working simplex or half-duplex, what was keyed in at the keyboard would be typed out at the printing portion. If working full-duplex, sending would be blind as the printing portion was being used only for reception. (2000-04-02)
impact printer         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
<printer> The earlier, noisier kind of printer where part of the mechanism comes into contact with the paper. The term would only be only used in contrast to "non-impact printer". Examples include line printer, daisy wheel printer, {golf ball printer}, dot matrix printer, Braille printer. (1998-10-13)

Wikipedia

Generic access profile

The Generic Access Profile (GAP) (ETSI standard EN 300 444) describes a set of mandatory requirements to allow any conforming DECT Fixed Part (base) to interoperate with any conforming DECT Portable Part (handset) to provide basic telephony services when attached to a 3.1 kHz telephone network (as defined by EN 300 176-2).

The objective of GAP is to ensure interoperation at the air interface (i.e., the radio connection) and at the level of procedures to establish, maintain and release telephone calls (Call Control). GAP also mandates procedures for registering Portable Parts to a Fixed Part (Mobility Management). A GAP-compliant handset from one manufacturer should work, at the basic level of making calls, with a GAP-compliant base from another manufacturer, although it may be unable to access advanced features of the base station such as phone book synchronization or remote operation of an answering machine. Most consumer-level DECT phones and base stations support the GAP profile, even those that do not publicize the feature, and thus can be used together. However some manufacturers lock their systems to prevent interoperability, or supply bases that cannot register new handsets.

The GAP does not describe how the Fixed Part is connected to the external telephone network.