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Appendix A – Glossary 
 
Term 
Description 
802.11 
 
A family of specifications for wireless  
LANs developed by a working group of the IEEE. This wireless Ethernet 
protocol, often called Wi-Fi. 
10BASE-T 
A designation for the type of wiring used by Ethernet networks with a data 
rate of 10 Mbps. Also known as Category 3 (CAT 3) wiring. See data rate, 
Ethernet. 
100BASE-T 
A designation for the type of wiring used by Ethernet networks with a data 
rate of 100 Mbps. Also known as Category 5 (CAT 5) wiring. See data 
rate, Ethernet. 
ADSL 
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line 
The most commonly deployed “flavor” of DSL for home users is 
asymmetrical DSL. The term asymmetrical refers to its unequal data rates 
for downloading and uploading (the download rate is higher than the 
upload rate). The asymmetrical rates benefit home users because they 
typically download much more data from the Internet than they upload. 
Analog 
An analog signal is a signal that has had its frequency modified in some 
way, such as by amplifying its strength or varying its frequency, in order to 
add information to the signal. The voice component in DSL is an analog 
signal. See digital. 
ATM 
Asynchronous Transfer Mode 
A standard for high-speed transmission of data, text, voice, and video, 
widely used within the Internet. ATM data rates range from 45 Mbps to 2.5 
Gbps. See data rate. 
Authenticate 
To verify a user’s identity, such as by prompting for a password. 
Binary 
The “base two” system of numbers that uses only two digits, 0 and 1, to 
represent all numbers. In binary, the number 1 is written as 1, 2 as 10, 3 
as 11, 4 as 100, etc. Although expressed as decimal numbers for 
convenience, IP addresses in actual use are binary numbers; e.g., the IP 
address 209.191.4.240 is 11010001.10111111.00000100.11110000 in 
binary. See bit, IP address, network mask. 
Bit 
Short for “binary digit,” a bit is a number that can have two values, 0 or 1. 
See binary. 
Bps 
bits per second 
Bridging 
Passing data from your network to your ISP and vice versa using the 
hardware addresses of the devices at each location. Bridging contrasts 
with routing which can add more intelligence to data transfers by using 
network addresses instead. The device can perform both routing and 
bridging. Typically, when both functions are enabled, the device routes IP 
data and bridges all other types of data. See routing. 
 
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