Remotek Corporation BK1010 Manuale Utente
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23
Glossary
Useful Terms
Bluetooth
A mobile personal area network (PAN) technology from the Bluetooth
Special Interest Group founded in 1998 by 3M, Ericsson, IBM, Intel,
Motorola, Nokia, and Toshiba. Bluetooth is an open standard for
short-range transmission of digital voice and data between mobile
devices and desktop devices. It provides up to 720 Kbps data transfer
within a range of 10 meters and up to 100 meters with a power boost.
Bluetooth uses omnidirectional radio waves that can transmit through
walls and other non-metal barriers; transmits in the unlicensed
2.4GHz ISM band and uses a frequency hopping spread spectrum
technique that changes its signal 1600 times per second. The name
Bluetooth comes from King Harald Blatand (Bluetooth) of Denmark.
BQB
(Bluetooth Qualification Body) An individual person recognized by the
Bluetooth Qualification Review Board (BQRB) to be responsible for
checking declarations and documents against requirements, verifying
the authenticity of product test reports, and listing products on the
official Bluetooth Qualified Products List.
Headset
A device that is equivalent to a telephone handset in functionality, but
is designed to fit around the person's head for more comfort by
leaving both hands free. Like a handset, the headset contains a
microphone and one or two speakers (for one or both ears).
Pairing
An identification and matching process between your target devices
and the Bluetooth devices. Before you first use a Bluetooth Headset,
you must set up your mobile phone’s supporting function, so that your
mobile phone can identify and search for the Bluetooth Headset and
transfer incoming calls to the headset.
Wireless
Radio transmission via the airwaves. Various communications
techniques are used to provide wireless transmission including
infrared line of sight, cellular, microwave, satellite, packet radio and
spread spectrum.
A mobile personal area network (PAN) technology from the Bluetooth
Special Interest Group founded in 1998 by 3M, Ericsson, IBM, Intel,
Motorola, Nokia, and Toshiba. Bluetooth is an open standard for
short-range transmission of digital voice and data between mobile
devices and desktop devices. It provides up to 720 Kbps data transfer
within a range of 10 meters and up to 100 meters with a power boost.
Bluetooth uses omnidirectional radio waves that can transmit through
walls and other non-metal barriers; transmits in the unlicensed
2.4GHz ISM band and uses a frequency hopping spread spectrum
technique that changes its signal 1600 times per second. The name
Bluetooth comes from King Harald Blatand (Bluetooth) of Denmark.
BQB
(Bluetooth Qualification Body) An individual person recognized by the
Bluetooth Qualification Review Board (BQRB) to be responsible for
checking declarations and documents against requirements, verifying
the authenticity of product test reports, and listing products on the
official Bluetooth Qualified Products List.
Headset
A device that is equivalent to a telephone handset in functionality, but
is designed to fit around the person's head for more comfort by
leaving both hands free. Like a handset, the headset contains a
microphone and one or two speakers (for one or both ears).
Pairing
An identification and matching process between your target devices
and the Bluetooth devices. Before you first use a Bluetooth Headset,
you must set up your mobile phone’s supporting function, so that your
mobile phone can identify and search for the Bluetooth Headset and
transfer incoming calls to the headset.
Wireless
Radio transmission via the airwaves. Various communications
techniques are used to provide wireless transmission including
infrared line of sight, cellular, microwave, satellite, packet radio and
spread spectrum.