Panasonic Panafax DX-2000 User Manual page 214

Panasonic facsimile user's guide dx-2000
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Glossary
Header
Home Page
Host
ID
ITU-T
ITU-T Image No.1
Image memory capacity
Industry Canada (D.O.C)
Information code
Initial sending station
Internet
Intranet
IP Address
ISP
(Internet Service Provider)
Journal
Keypad
LAN (Local Area Network)
LCD
212
A row of information that is transmitted by the sending machine and printed
on the top of each page by the receiving unit. This identifies the
transmitting unit and information about the transmission, such as time and
date.
The page that your Browser displays when it starts up or the main web
page for a business, organization, etc.
Any computer on a network that is a repository for services available to
other computers on the network. A Host must have a unique Host name
within a domain. The host is the first (left most) section of the Fully
Qualified Domain Name (FQDN). The remainder of the FQDN is the
domain and often tells you something about where the DX-2000 is located
(i.e., at Panasonic).
Example:
Your DX-2000's email address is: Fax@fax01.panasonic.com
In the example above "fax01" is the host and "panasonic.com" is the
domain.
A programmable address of up to 20 digits identifying your machine.
International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication, formerly
known as C.C.I.T.T.
An industry standard document that allows comparisons of the
transmission speeds and capabilities of facsimile machines.
This signifies the amount of memory available in your unit capable of
storing pages of documents. All page units of measure are based on the
ITU-T Image No.1.
Department of Communications. The Canadian Government organization
that regulates communications originating or terminating in Canada.
A code that is internally generated by your Fax stating a specific
operational error or machine failure.
In a relay network, the station that is originating the document
transmission.
The vast collection of inter-connected networks that all use the TCP/IP
protocols. The Internet connects independent networks into a vast global
internet.
A private network inside a company or organization that uses the same
kinds of software that you would find on the public Internet, but that is only
for internal use.
A unique number used to identify equipment or host computers on the
Internet.
An institution that provides access to the Internet in some form, usually for
money.
A report that is printed by your unit listing the last 100 transactions.
A group of numeric keys located on your control panel.
A computer network system and printer limited to an immediate area, such
as an Office, Factory, and University used to integrate and exchange data.
Liquid Crystal Display. The display area of your machine.

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