Lucent Technologies MERLIN LEGEND Release 6.0 System Programming Manual page 1077

Communications system
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MERLIN LEGEND Communications System Release 6.0
System Programming 555-660-111
Glossary
display buttons
DLC
DNIS
door answering
unit
DOS
drop-and-insert
equipment
DS0
DS1
DSL
DSS
DTE
DTMF signaling
Buttons on an MLX display telephone used to access the
telephone's display.
(Direct-Line Console) Telephone used by a system
operator to answer outside calls (not directed to an
individual or a group) and inside calls, transfer calls, make
outside calls for users with outward calling restrictions, set
up conference calls, and monitor system operation.
(Dialed Number Identification Service) Service provided by
AT&T and MCI; it routes incoming 800 or 900 calls
according to customer-selected parameters, such as area
code, state, or time of call.
Device connected to a basic telephone jack and used at an
unattended extension or front desk.
(disk operating system)
A device that can be installed between systems connected
by tandem PRI trunks or T1-emulated tandem tie trunks to
allow fractional use of the facility, that is, use of fewer than
23 of the PRI B-channels or fewer than 24 of the T1
channels . In a PRI facility, the equipment must never drop
Channel 24, the D-channel . All channels must still be
programmed and all count towards the system maximum of
80 lines.
(Digital Signal 0) Single 64-kbps voice or data channel.
(Digital Signal 1) Bit -oriented signaling interface that
multiplexes twenty-four 64-kbps channels into a single
1.544-Mbps stream.
(Digital Subscriber Line) A Digital Subscriber Line provides
full-duplex service on a single twisted metallic pair (2-wire)
at a rate sufficient to support ISDN Basic Rate Access.
(Direct Station Selector) 60-button adjunct that enhances
the call-handling capabilities of an MLX-20L or MLX-28D
telephone used as an operator console.
(data terminal equipment) Equipment that makes the
endpoints in a connection over a data connection; for
example, a data terminal, personal computer, host
computer, or printer.
(dual-tone multifrequency signaling) Touch-tone signaling
from telephones using the voice transmission path. DTMF
signaling provides 12 distinct signals, each representing a
dialed digit or character, and each composed of two
voiceband frequencies.
Issue 1
February 1998
Page GL-11

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