Nomadix AG 5500 User Manual page 326

Access gateways
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AG 5500
Mbps
(Megabits per second) A standard measure for data transmission speeds (for example, the rate at which information
travels over the Internet). 1 Mbps denotes one million bits per second. Several factors can influence how quickly data
travels, including modem speed, bandwidth capacity, and Internet traffic levels at the time of transmission. Not to be
confused with MegaBytes per second (MBps). See also, Throughput.
MIB
(Management Information Base) A set of parameters an SNMP management station can query or establish in the
SNMP agent of a network device (for example, a router). Standard minimal MIBs have been defined, and vendors
often have their own private enterprise MIBs. In theory, any SNMP manager can talk to any SNMP agent with a
properly defined MIB. See also, SNMP.
Misconfigured User
A Nomadix, Inc. term used to describe users who have IP address configurations that are different from the current
network. For example, if the current network is 123.45.67.89 but the user's IP address is 10.10.10.15, then this user is
considered to be "misconfigured."
NAT
(Network Address Translation) An Internet standard that enables a Local Area Network (LAN) to use one set of IP
addresses for internal traffic and a second set of IP addresses for external traffic. A NAT box located where the LAN
meets the Internet performs all the necessary IP address translations. NAT provides a type of firewall by hiding its
internal IP addresses. Additionally, NAT enables companies to use more internal IP addresses (because the addresses
are only used internally and there's no possibility of conflicting with IP addresses used by other companies). NAT also
allows companies to combine multiple ISDN connections into a single Internet connection. See also, ISDN.
Node
An addressable point on a network. A node can connect a computer system, a terminal, or various peripheral devices to
the network. Each node on a network has a distinct name. On the Internet, a node is a host computer with a unique
Domain Name
IP
Address.
domain name and IP address. See also,
and
NTP
(Network Time Protocol) An Internet standard protocol (built on top of TCP/IP) that assures accurate synchronization
(to the millisecond) of computer clock times in a network of computers. Based on UTC, NTP synchronizes client
workstation clocks to the U.S. Naval Observatory master clocks. Running as a continuous background client program
on a computer, NTP sends periodic time requests to servers, obtaining server time stamps and using them to adjust the
client's clock.
OFDM
FDM
(Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) An
modulation technique for transmitting large amounts of
digital data over a radio wave. OFDM works by splitting the radio signal into multiple smaller sub-signals that are then
transmitted simultaneously at different frequencies to the receiver. OFDM reduces the amount of crosstalk in signal
transmissions. 802.11a WLAN technology uses OFDM.
OSPF
(Open Shortest Path First) This routing protocol was developed for IP networks based on the shortest path first or link-
state algorithm. Routers use link-state algorithms to send routing information to all nodes on a network by calculating
the shortest path to each node based on a topography of the Internet constructed by each node. Routers send that
portion of the routing table (keeping track of routes to particular network destinations) that describes the state of its
own links, and it also sends the complete routing structure (topography). The advantage of shortest path first
algorithms is that they result in smaller more frequent updates everywhere. They converge quickly, thus preventing
such problems as routing loops and count-to-infinity (when routers continuously increment the hop count to a
particular network). This makes for a stable network. OSPF (version 2) is defined in RFC 1583 and is rapidly replacing
RFC
and Router.
RIP on the Internet as the preferred routing protocol. See also,
314
Glossary of Terms

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