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Glossary
Glossary
Access point
An access point, such as the Giga762SX WLAN dsl, is the centre of a wireless local net-
work (
WLAN
). It handles the connection of the wireless linked network components and
regulates the data traffic in the wireless network. The access point also serves as an
interface to other networks, for example an existing
Ethernet
LAN or via a modem to the
Internet
. The operating mode of wireless networks with an access point is called
Infrastructure mode
.
Ad-hoc mode
Ad-hoc mode describes wireless local networks (
WLANs
), in which the network compo-
nents set up a spontaneous network without an
Access point
, for example several Note-
books in a conference. All the network components are peers. They must have a wire-
less
Network adapter
.
ADSL /ADSL2+
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) and ADSL 2+ are special types of
DSL
data
transfer technology.
AES
Advanced Encryption Standard
AES is an encryption system, which was published as a standard in October 2000 by the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). It is used for
WPA
encryption. A
distinction is made between the three AES variants AES-128, AES-192 and AES-256 on
the basis of the key length.
Auto connect
Auto connect means that applications such as Web browser, Messenger and E-mail
automatically open an
Internet
connection when they are launched. This can lead to
high charges if you are not using
Flat rate
. To avoid this, you can select the manual con-
nect option on the Giga762SX WLAN dsl.
Bridge
A bridge connects several network segments to form a joint network, for example to
make a
TCP/IP
network. The segments can have different physical characteristics, for
example different cabling as with
Ethernet
and wireless LANs. Linking individual seg-
ments via bridges allows local networks of practically unlimited size.
See also:
Switch
,
Hub
,
Router
,
Gateway
Broadcast
A broadcast is a data packet not directed to a particular recipient but to all the network
components in the network. The Giga762SX WLAN dsl does not pass on broadcast pack-
ets; they always remain within the local network (
LAN
) it administers.