Symbol MC9000-G Product Reference Manual page 372

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MC9000-G for Embedded Windows® CE .NET Product Reference Guide
Intercharacter Gap
Interleaved Bar Code
Interleaved 2 of 5
Internet Protocol Address
I/O Ports
Input/Output Ports
IP
IP Address
IPX/SPX
The space between two adjacent bar code characters in a
discrete code.
A bar code in which characters are paired together, using
bars to represent the first character and the intervening
spaces to represent the second.
A binary bar code symbology representing character pairs
in groups of five bars and five interleaved spaces.
Interleaving provides for greater information density. The
location of wide elements (bar/spaces) within each group
determines which characters are encoded. This continuous
code type uses no intercharacter spaces. Only numeric (0 to
9) and START/STOP characters may be encoded.
See IP.
interface The connection between two devices, defined by
common physical characteristics, signal characteristics,
and signal meanings. Types of interfaces include RS-232
and PCMCIA.
I/O ports are primarily dedicated to passing information
into or out of the terminal's memory. Series 9000 mobile
computers include Serial and USB ports.
(Internet Protocol) The IP part of the TCP/IP communications
protocol. IP implements the network layer (layer 3) of the
protocol, which contains a network address and is used to
route a message to a different network or subnetwork. IP
accepts "packets" from the layer 4 transport protocol (TCP
or UDP), adds its own header to it and delivers a
"datagram" to the layer 2 data link protocol. It may also
break the packet into fragments to support the maximum
transmission unit (MTU) of the network.
(Internet Protocol address) The address of a computer
attached to an IP network. Every client and server station
must have a unique IP address. A 32-bit address used by a
computer on a IP network. Client workstations have either
a permanent address or one that is dynamically assigned to
them each session. IP addresses are written as four sets of
numbers separated by periods; for example, 204.171.64.2.
Internet Package Exchange/Sequential Packet Exchange. A
communications protocol for Novell. IPX is Novell's Layer 3
protocol, similar to XNS and IP, and used in NetWare
networks. SPX is Novell's version of the Xerox SPP protocol.

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