Axis 221 0221-004 Manuale Utente

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AXIS COMMUNICATIONS
<Product Name> Quick User’s Guide
 
61 
Glossary of Terms
ActiveX - A software component, also refered to as a 
control, that integrates into and extends the Microsoft(R) 
Internet Explorer(TM) web browser. ActiveX controls are 
typicaly downloaded and installed dynamicaly by the 
browser from a web page.
AMC - AXIS Media Control. The control required for 
viewing video images in Internet Explorer. Installs 
automatically on first use.
API - Application Programming Interface. The Axis API 
can be used for integrating Axis products into other 
applications.
ARP - Address Resolution Protocol. A protocol used to 
associate an IP address to a hardware MAC address. A 
request is broadcast on the local network to find out what 
the MAC address is for the IP address.
ARTPEC - Axis Real Time Picture Encoder - used for video 
image compression. 
CCD - Charge Coupled Device. CCD is one of the two main 
types of image sensors used in digital cameras. When a 
picture is taken, the CCD is struck by light coming through 
the camera’s lens. Each of the thousands or millions of tiny 
pixels that make up the CCD convert this light into 
electrons. 
CGI - Common Gateway Interface. A set of rules (or a 
program) that allows a Web Server to communicate with 
other programs.
Client/Server - Describes the network relationship between 
two computer programs in which one, the client, makes a 
service request from another - the server.
DC-Iris - This special type of iris is electrically controlled 
by the Axis camera, to automatically regulate the amount 
of light allowed to enter.
DNS - The Domain Name System (DNS) locates and 
translates Internet domain names into IP (Internet Protocol) 
addresses.
Ethernet - A widely used networking standard.
ETRAX - A family of microprocessors developed by Axis.
Firewall - A virtual barrier between a LAN (Local Area 
Network) and other networks, e.g. the Internet.
FTP - File Transfer Protocol. Used for the simple transfer of 
files to and from an FTP-server.
Full-duplex - Transmission of data, e.g. audio, in two 
directions simultaneously. In an audio system this would 
describe e.g. a telephone system. Half-duplex also provides 
bi-directional communication, but only in one direction at 
a time, as in a walkie-talkie system. See also Simplex.
HTML - Hypertext Mark-up Language. Used widely for 
authoring documents viewed in web browsers.
HTTP - Hypertext Transfer Protocol. The set of rules for 
exchanging files (text, images, sound, video, and other files) on 
the World Wide Web.
HTTPS - Hypertext Transfer Protocol over Secure Socket Layer. 
A web protocol that provides encryption for page requests from 
users and for the pages returned by the web server.
Intranet - A private network limited to an organization or 
corporation. Usually closed to external traffic.
IP - Internet-Protocol. See TCP/IP.
IP address - A unique number used by a network device, to 
allow it to be identified and found on the network. The 32-bit 
IP address is made up of four groups (or quads) of decimal 
digits separated by periods. An example of an IP address is: 
192.168.0.1
ISMA - Internet Streaming Media Alliance.
JPEG - A standard image format, used widely for photographs. 
Also known as JPG.
LAN - A local area network (LAN) is a group of computers and 
associated devices that typically share common resources 
within a limited geographical area.
Linux - A popular, free, open source, UNIX like operating 
system, developed in cooperation by various individuals and 
organizations.
Lux - A standard unit for the measurement of light, where 1 
Lux equals the light emitted from a single candle at a distance 
of one meter.
Mbit/s - Megabits per second. A unit for measuring speeds in 
networks. A LAN might run at 10 or 100 Mbit/s.
MPEG-4 - A video compression standard that makes good use 
of bandwidth, and which can provide high-quality video 
streams at less than 1 Mbit/s. 
Multicast - A bandwidth-conserving technology that reduces 
bandwidth usage by simultaneously delivering a single stream 
of information to multiple network recipients. 
NTSC - National Television Standards Committee. NTSC is the 
standard format used for televisions in most of North and 
Central America, and Japan. 
NWAY - A network protocol that automatically negotiates the 
highest possible common transmission speed between two 
devices.
PAL - Phase Altering Line. PAL is the standard format used for 
televisions in most of the world (other than the US, Canada, and 
Japan).
PEM - Privacy Enhanced Mail. An early standard for securing 
electronic mail. The PEM-format is often used for representing 
an HTTPS certificate or certificate request.