dial-back modem - определение. Что такое dial-back modem
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Что (кто) такое dial-back modem - определение

DISTANCE AMPLIFYING INSTRUMENT
Dial gauge; Dial test indicator; Dial indicator
  • Ideal test indicator pushed
Найдено результатов: 2292
K56flex         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
<protocol> A modem standard developed by Rockwell for 56 kbps communications. K56flex Became more popular than the rival X2 but will be superseded by the official V.90 standard. [Already superseded?] (1998-09-08)
MODEM         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
MOdulator DEModulator
Modem         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
A modulator-demodulator or modem is a computer hardware device that converts data from a digital format into a format suitable for an analog transmission medium such as telephone or radio. A modem transmits data by modulating one or more carrier wave signals to encode digital information, while the receiver demodulates the signal to recreate the original digital information.
modem         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
(modems)
A modem is a device which uses a telephone line to connect computers or computer systems. (COMPUTING)
He sent his work to his publishers by modem.
N-COUNT: also by N
modem         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
<hardware, communications> (Modulator/demodulator) An electronic device for converting between serial data (typically EIA-232) from a computer and an audio signal suitable for transmission over a telephone line connected to another modem. In one scheme the audio signal is composed of silence (no data) or one of two frequencies representing zero and one. Modems are distinguished primarily by the maximum data rate they support. Data rates can range from 75 bits per second up to 56000 and beyond. Data from the user (i.e. flowing from the local terminal or computer via the modem to the telephone line) is sometimes at a lower rate than the other direction, on the assumption that the user cannot type more than a few characters per second. Various data compression and error correction algorithms are required to support the highest speeds. Other optional features are auto-dial (auto-call) and auto-answer which allow the computer to initiate and accept calls without human intervention. Most modern modems support a number of different protocols, and two modems, when first connected, will automatically negotiate to find a common protocol (this process may be audible through the modem or computer's loudspeakers). Some modem protocols allow the two modems to renegotiate ("retrain") if the initial choice of data rate is too high and gives too many transmission errors. A modem may either be internal (connected to the computer's bus) or external ("stand-alone", connected to one of the computer's serial ports). The actual speed of transmission in characters per second depends not just the modem-to-modem data rate, but also on the speed with which the processor can transfer data to and from the modem, the kind of compression used and whether the data is compressed by the processor or the modem, the amount of noise on the telephone line (which causes retransmissions), the serial character format (typically 8N1: one start bit, eight data bits, no parity, one stop bit). See also acoustic coupler, adaptive answering, {baud barf}, Bulletin Board System, Caller ID, SoftModem, U.S. Robotics, UUCP, whalesong. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.dcom.modems. (2002-05-04)
modem         
  • Cable modem
  • Collection of modems once used in Australia, including dial-up, DSL, and cable modems.
  • A bluetooth radio module with built-in antenna (left)
  • The original 300-baud Hayes Smartmodem
  • 127x127px
  • 110x110px
  • notebooks]]
  • Dial-up modem bank at an ISP
  • ISA]] card
  • Null modem adapter
  • TeleGuide terminal
  • An ONT providing data, telephone and television service
DEVICE THAT MODULATES AN ANALOG CARRIER SIGNAL TO ENCODE DIGITAL INFORMATION
K56flex; K56Plus; Computer modem; X2 (protocol); Telephone modem; 56 kbit/s modem; Modems; MODEM; 56K; 56k; 56 Kbps modem; 56,000 bps modem; V.Flex2; K56Flex; K56plus; X2 (Chipset); Analog modem; 56K modem; Mdoem; External modem; Intelligent modem; Limited Distance Modem; Mobile USB modem; Dial-up modem; 56k modem; 56k Modem; Gsm modem; 3G dongle; Portable modem; Volksmodem; Voiceband modem; Usb modem; 56kbit modem; 🖀; Phone Modem; Optical modem; 300 baud; Draft:Modem; Automatic calling unit; Automatic calling units; 33.6k modem
['m??d?m]
¦ noun a device for interconverting digital and analogue signals, especially to enable a computer to be connected to a telephone line.
¦ verb send (data) by modem.
Origin
1950s: blend of modulator and demodulator.
dial-up         
  • An example handshake of a dial-up modem
  • Banks of modems used by an ISP to provide dial-up internet service
  • A [[TiVo Series2]] video recorder's back panel. The telephone socket, located near the cooling fan exhaust, is a way for the machine to download required [[TV guide]] data.
  • TV satellite dish]] cannot transmit signals back to the satellite.
  • Active [[modem]] [[USRobotics]] Courier 28800-bit/s
METHOD OF INTERNET ACCESS USING A PHONE LINE AND THE CREATION OF SPECIFIC TONES
Dial-up; Dialup; Dialup access; Dialup connection; Dialup service; Dial Up; Dial up; Dial-up networking; Dial-up network; Dial-up service; Dailup; Dial-up Internet; Dial-up access; High speed dialup; Dial up internet access; Dial-up internet access; Dial-Up; DialUp; Dial-up internet; Dial-up internet service; Dial-up line; Dial-Up Internet; Dial up internet
¦ adjective (of a computer system or service) used remotely via a telephone line.
Dial-up Internet access         
  • An example handshake of a dial-up modem
  • Banks of modems used by an ISP to provide dial-up internet service
  • A [[TiVo Series2]] video recorder's back panel. The telephone socket, located near the cooling fan exhaust, is a way for the machine to download required [[TV guide]] data.
  • TV satellite dish]] cannot transmit signals back to the satellite.
  • Active [[modem]] [[USRobotics]] Courier 28800-bit/s
METHOD OF INTERNET ACCESS USING A PHONE LINE AND THE CREATION OF SPECIFIC TONES
Dial-up; Dialup; Dialup access; Dialup connection; Dialup service; Dial Up; Dial up; Dial-up networking; Dial-up network; Dial-up service; Dailup; Dial-up Internet; Dial-up access; High speed dialup; Dial up internet access; Dial-up internet access; Dial-Up; DialUp; Dial-up internet; Dial-up internet service; Dial-up line; Dial-Up Internet; Dial up internet
Dial-up Internet access is a form of Internet access that uses the facilities of the public switched telephone network (PSTN) to establish a connection to an Internet service provider (ISP) by dialing a telephone number on a conventional telephone line. Dial-up connections use modems to decode audio signals into data to send to a router or computer, and to encode signals from the latter two devices to send to another modem.
dialup         
  • An example handshake of a dial-up modem
  • Banks of modems used by an ISP to provide dial-up internet service
  • A [[TiVo Series2]] video recorder's back panel. The telephone socket, located near the cooling fan exhaust, is a way for the machine to download required [[TV guide]] data.
  • TV satellite dish]] cannot transmit signals back to the satellite.
  • Active [[modem]] [[USRobotics]] Courier 28800-bit/s
METHOD OF INTERNET ACCESS USING A PHONE LINE AND THE CREATION OF SPECIFIC TONES
Dial-up; Dialup; Dialup access; Dialup connection; Dialup service; Dial Up; Dial up; Dial-up networking; Dial-up network; Dial-up service; Dailup; Dial-up Internet; Dial-up access; High speed dialup; Dial up internet access; Dial-up internet access; Dial-Up; DialUp; Dial-up internet; Dial-up internet service; Dial-up line; Dial-Up Internet; Dial up internet
A temporary, as opposed to dedicated, connection between machines established over a telephone line using modems.
Back-to-back house         
  • A typical yard of 14 back-to-back houses. Note the shared "privies" (outdoor toilets) and "wash houses"
  • Back-to-back houses in Bellshaw Street, Bradford, showing a covered entrance to the courtyard
  • With no rear yard, across-street washing lines are employed with a [[pulley]] operated from street level.
  • Back-to-back housing courtyard, 1883
  • The exterior of the Birmingham back-to-backs, with shops and courtyard entrance
  • The courtyard
  • Plans for houses in Nottingham, 1844
FORM OF TERRACED HOUSE
Back to backs; Back-to-back housing; Back-to-back houses; Back to back house; Back-to-backs
Back-to-backs are a form of terraced houses in the United Kingdom, built from the late 18th century through to the early 20th century in various guises. Many thousands of these dwellings were built during the Industrial Revolution for the rapidly increasing population of expanding factory towns.

Википедия

Indicator (distance amplifying instrument)

In various contexts of science, technology, and manufacturing (such as machining, fabricating, and additive manufacturing), an indicator is any of various instruments used to accurately measure small distances and angles, and amplify them to make them more obvious. The name comes from the concept of indicating to the user that which their naked eye cannot discern; such as the presence, or exact quantity, of some small distance (for example, a small height difference between two flat surfaces, a slight lack of concentricity between two cylinders, or other small physical deviations).

The classic mechanical version, called a dial indicator, provides a dial display similar to a clock face with clock hands; the hands point to graduations in a circular scales on the dial which represent the distance of the probe tip from a zero setting. The internal works of a mechanical dial indicator are similar to the precision clockworks of a mechanical wristwatch, employing a rack and pinion gear to read the probe position, instead of a pendulum escapement to read time. The side of the indicator probe shaft is cut with teeth to provide the rack gear. When the probe moves, the rack gear drives a pinion gear to rotate, spinning the indicator "clock" hand. Springs preload the gear mechanism to minimize the backlash error in the reading. Precise quality of the gear forms and bearing freedom determines the repeatable precision of measurement achieved. Since the mechanisms are necessarily delicate, rugged framework construction is required to perform reliably in harsh applications such as machine tool metalworking operations, similar to how wristwatches are ruggedized.

Other types of indicator include mechanical devices with cantilevered pointers and electronic devices with digital displays. Electronic versions employ an optical or capacitive grating to detect microscopic steps in the position of the probe.

Indicators may be used to check the variation in tolerance during the inspection process of a machined part, measure the deflection of a beam or ring under laboratory conditions, as well as many other situations where a small measurement needs to be registered or indicated. Dial indicators typically measure ranges from 0.25 mm to 300 mm (0.015in to 12.0in), with graduations of 0.001 mm to 0.01 mm (metric) or 0.00005in to 0.001in (imperial/customary).

Various names are used for indicators of different types and purposes, including dial gauge, clock, probe indicator, pointer, test indicator, dial test indicator, drop indicator, plunger indicator, and others.