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5. MULTICULTURAL ENGLISH REFERENCES
5.1
This manual supports the requirements of technicians in the United States of America
(U.S.) and in the Inter-Tel Europe market, which includes the United Kingdom (U.K.).
Because of this dual support, dual references are made to industry features, standards, and jar-
gon, as appropriate throughout the manual. Terms used in the Inter-Tel Europe market appear
in brackets [<European equivalent>]. For the purposes of this addendum, British English terms
are assumed to apply to other English-speaking European cultures, as well.
5.2
For example, the U.S. telecom industry refers to an audio communication line between
a public switching system and a private switching system as a "central office (CO) trunk." In
the U.K., this same type of line is called a "local exchange trunk." Applying the dual-reference
guideline would result in the following statements:
During system installation, the technician connects CO trunks [local exchange trunks]
to the Loop Start cards.
To turn the Diagnostics Mode on or off at an administrator endpoint, the system admin-
istrator enters 9900 [9100 in Europe].
5.3
However, this manual does not make a similar distinction between American English
and British English spellings of common words. Only American English spellings appear in
this manual. For example, the word "analog" is not also spelled "analogue," because as the
meaning is clear.
6. ATM
6.1
Versions 6.0 and later support the standard system configurations as well as a configu-
ration using an Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) Switch. With the ATM technology, an
ATM system can more than double the current capacity of the CPU512 embedded system and
Windows NT
connections to allow various traffic, such as data, voice, and video, to be carried over the same
local or wide area network. Using a UTP5 or OC-3 connection, the ATM Switch can simulta-
neously transmit this traffic, providing a seamless connection for single- or dual-chassis sys-
tems.
6.2
Because the ATM system supports such a high capacity, a Call Processing (CP) Server
running Windows 2000 is required. See
CP Server.
7. SYSTEM CAPACITIES
7.1
The basic chassis has eight circuit card slots, seven of which can be used for station,
trunk, and optional resource cards. The fully-expanded, quad-chassis system (actually four
basic chassis connected together) has 32 circuit card slots, 28 of which can be used for station,
trunk, and optional resource cards. A fully-loaded ATM system (four, dual-chassis systems
connected to an ATM Switch) has 64 circuit card slots, 56 of which can be used for device and/
or resource cards.
A. SYSTEM CAPACITIES
7.2
The table on the following page lists the maximum number of cards that may be
installed in a single-, quad-, or eight-chassis (ATM) system.
Multicultural English References
®
INTER-TEL
AXXESS
®
-based CPU. ATM, which transmits packets of fixed-length cells, uses logical
Appendix C — CP Server
®
MANUAL VERSION 11.0 – May 2008
for more information on the
1
Overview
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