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Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions
Branche: Telecommunications
Number of terms: 29235
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
ATIS is the leading technical planning and standards development organization committed to the rapid development of global, market-driven standards for the information, entertainment and communications industry.
A set of security relevant data which is protected by integrity and data origin authentication from an issuing security authority, and includes an indication of a time period of validity. Note: All certificates are deemed to be security certificates (see the relevant definitions in 7498-2. )The term "security certificate" is adopted in order to avoid terminology conflicts with (i.e. The directory authentication standard. )
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of services including toll and assistance, listing services and intercept, associated with the originating connection network capability.
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of signal elements that is used to transmit or represent a function-control character that actuates a control function, such as carriage return, line-feed, letters shift, or figures shift, that is to be performed by communications devices, such as teletypewriters and teleprinters.
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of signaling link (s) directly connecting two signaling points.
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of signaling links directly connecting two signaling points and having the same physical characteristic (bit rate, propagation delay, and the like. )
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of signaling links directly connecting two signaling points.
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of two or more adjacent tracks written on a diskette with the same data, as part of a method of copy protection.
Industry:Telecommunications
A set of unambiguous rules specifying the manner in which data may be represented in a discrete form. Note 1: Codes may be used for brevity or security. Note 2: Use of a code provides a means of converting information into a form suitable for communications, processing, or encryption. 2. System of communication in which arbitrary groups of letters, numbers, or symbols represent units of plain text of varying length. Note: Codes may or may not provide security. Common uses include: (a) converting information into a form suitable for communications or encryption, (b) reducing the length of time required to transmit information, (c) describing the instructions which control the operation of a computer, and (d) converting plain text to meaningless combinations of letters or numbers and vice versa. 3. A cryptosystem in which the cryptographic equivalents, (usually called "code groups") typically consisting of letters or digits (or both) in otherwise meaningless combinations, are substituted for plain text elements which are primarily words, phrases, or sentences. 4. A set of rules that maps the elements of one set, the coded set, onto the elements of another set, the code element set. Synonym coding scheme. 5. A set of items, such as abbreviations, that represents corresponding members of another set. Synonym encode. 6. To represent data or a computer program in a symbolic form that can be accepted by a processor. 7. To write a routine.
Industry:Telecommunications
A sharing of an active service among devices or networks. This can include various manipulations to share, extend, or prune membership in a multi-party service or multi-network connectivity that supports it. The concept of concurrence applies not only to a service, but also to sessions, application associations and to context.
Industry:Telecommunications
A shift, applied to the representation of a number in a fixed radix numeration system and in a fixed-point representation system, and in which only the characters representing the fixed-point part of the number are moved. An arithmetic shift is usually equivalent to multiplying the number by a positive or a negative integral power of the radix, except for the effect of any rounding; compare the logical shift with the arithmetic shift, especially in the case of floating-point representation.
Industry:Telecommunications