Axis 211W Guida Utente

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AXIS COMMUNICATIONS
<Product Name> Quick User’s Guide
AXIS 211W - Glossary of Terms 
 
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Glossary of Terms
802.1X - An IEEE standard for port-based Network Admission Control. 
It provides authentication to devices attached to a network port (wired 
or wireless), establishing a point-to-point connection, or, if 
authentication fails, preventing access on that port. 802.1X is based on 
EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol). 
ActiveX - A standard that enables software components to interact with 
one another in a networked environment, regardless of the language(s) 
used to create them. Web browsers may come into contact with ActiveX 
controls, ActiveX documents, and ActiveX scripts. ActiveX controls are 
often downloaded and installed automatically as required. 
AF (Autofocus) - A system by which the camera lens automatically 
focuses on a selected part of the subject. 
Angle - The field of view, relative to a standard lens in a 35mm still 
camera, expressed in degrees, e.g. 30°. For practical purposes, this is the 
area that a lens can cover, where the angle of view is determined by the 
focal length of the lens. A wide-angle lens has a short focal length and 
covers a wider angle of view than standard or telephoto lenses, which 
have longer focal lengths.
ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) - This protocol is used to associate 
an IP address to a hardware MAC address. A request is broadcast on the 
local network to discover the MAC address for an IP address.
ARTPEC (Axis Real Time Picture Encoder) - This chip is used for image 
compression.
ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) - A circuit designed for 
a specific application, as opposed to a general purpose circuit, such as a 
microprocessor. 
Aspect ratio - A ratio of width to height in images. A common aspect 
ratio used for television screens and computer monitors is 4:3. 
High-definition television (HDTV) uses an aspect ratio of 16:9.
Autoiris (or DC-Iris) - This special type of iris is electrically controlled 
by the camera, to automatically regulate the amount of light allowed to 
enter.
AVI (Audio Video Interleave) - A video format that supports 
simultaneous playback of audio and video. 
Bitmap - A bitmap is a data file representing a rectangular grid of 
pixels. It defines a display space and color for each pixel (or "bit") in the 
display space. This type of image is known as a "raster graphic." GIFs 
and JPEGs are examples of image file types that contain bitmaps. 
Because a bitmap uses this fixed raster method, it cannot easily be 
rescaled without losing definition. Conversely, a vector graphic image 
uses geometrical shapes to represent the image, and can thus be quickly 
rescaled. 
Bit rate - The bit rate (in kbit/s or Mbit/s) is often referred to as speed, 
but actually defines the number of bits/time unit and not distance/time 
unit. 
Bluetooth - Bluetooth is an open standard for wireless transmission of 
voice and data between mobile devices (PCs, handheld computers, 
telephones and printers).
Bonjour - Also known as zero-configuration networking, Bonjour 
enables devices to automatically discover each other on a network, 
without having to enter IP addresses or configure DNS servers. Bonjour 
is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
Broadband - In network engineering terms, this describes transmission 
methods where two or more signals share the same carrier. In more 
popular terminology, broadband is taken to mean high-speed data 
transmission. 
Certificate authority (CA) - Is an entity that issues digital certificates 
which contains public key and private key pairs. The CA verifies an 
applicant’s credentials, so that users can trust the information in the 
certificate.
CCD (Charged Coupled Device) - This light-sensitive image device used 
in many digital cameras is a large integrated circuit that contains 
hundreds of thousands of photo-sites (pixels) that convert light energy 
into electronic signals. Its size is measured diagonally and can be 1/4", 
1/3", 1/2" or 2/3". 
CGI (Common Gateway Interface) - A specification for communication 
between a web server and other (CGI) programs. For example, a HTML 
page that contains a form might use a CGI program to process the form 
data once it is submitted.
CIF (Common Intermediate Format) - CIF refers to the analog video 
resolutions 352x288 pixels (PAL) and 352x240 pixels (NTSC). See also 
Resolution.
Client/Server - Client/server describes the relationship between two 
computer programs in which one program, the client, makes a service 
request from another program, the server, which fulfils the request. 
Typically, multiple client programs share the services of a common 
server program. A web browser is a client program that requests services 
(the sending of web pages or files) from a web server.
CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) - A CMOS is a 
widely used type of semiconductor that uses both negative and positive 
circuits. Since only one of the circuit types is on at any given time, 
CMOS chips require less power than chips using just one type of 
transistor. CMOS image sensors also allow processing circuits to be 
included on the same chip, an advantage not possible with CCD sensors, 
which are also much more expensive to produce.
Codec - In communications engineering, a codec is usually a 
coder/decoder. Codecs are used in integrated circuits or chips that 
convert, e.g. analog video and audio signals into a digital format for 
transmission. The codec also converts received digital signals back into 
analog format. A codec uses analog-to-digital conversion and 
digital-to-analog conversion in the same chip. 
Codec can also mean compression/decompression, in which case it is 
generally taken to mean an algorithm or computer program for reducing 
the size of large files and programs.
Compression - See Image Compression.
Contrast  - Defines the degree of difference between the lightest and 
darkest parts of an image or video stream.
DC-Iris - This special type of iris is electrically controlled by the 
camera, to automatically regulate the amount of light allowed to enter.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) - DHCP is a protocol 
that lets network administrators automate and centrally manage the 
assignment of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses to network devices in a 
network. 
DHCP uses the concept of a "lease" or amount of time that a given IP 
address will be valid for a computer. The lease time can vary, depending 
on how long a user is likely to require the network connection at a 
particular location. 
DHCP also supports static addresses for, e.g. computers running web 
servers, which need a permanent IP address.
DNS (Domain Name System) - DNS is used to locate and translate 
Internet domain names into IP (Internet Protocol) addresses. A domain 
name is a meaningful and easy-to-remember name for an Internet 
address. For example the domain name www.example.com is much 
easier to remember than 192.0.34.166. The translation tables for domain 
names are contained in Domain name servers.
Domain Server - Domains can also be used by organizations who wish 
to centralize the management of their (Windows) computers. Each user 
within a domain has an account that usually allows them to log in to 
and use any computer in the domain, although restrictions may also 
apply. The domain server is the server that authenticates the users on 
the network. 
Duplex - See Full-duplex.