Western Digital My Book World Edition II(white light) 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 198
GLOSSARY - 182
MY BOOK WORLD EDITION
USER MANUAL
LED — Light-emitting Diode. An electronic device that lights up when electricity is 
passed through it.
Media Server — Device that stores and shares media files (digital audio, digital 
video, and digital photos).
Media Storage — Device that stores media files (digital audio, digital video, and 
digital photos).
Memory — A device or system capable of storing and retrieving data.
MioNet
®
 —
 WD remote computer access service. Adding MioNet to your home or 
work computer allows you secure and instant access from any PC in the world back 
to your computer. You can use your applications and access and share files on your 
computer or storage device from anywhere. 
Mirroring — The process of generating an exact copy of saved data from one drive 
to another drive within a RAID 1 system. Each drive can be accessed and read 
separately. A mirrored drive can be removed from a system while the other drive(s) 
are still active. See also RAID 1.
MP3 — MPEG-audio layer 3. A digital audio coding scheme for distributing music 
over the Internet.
Multi-user — A system in information technology that enables more than one user to 
access data at the same time.
NAS — Network Attached Storage. Hard disk storage that is set up with its own 
network address rather than being attached to the computer that is serving network 
workstation users.
NAT  — Network Address Translation. Used in gateway devices that form the 
boundary between the public Internet and the private LAN. As IP packets from the 
private LAN traverse the gateway, NAT translates a private IP address and port 
number to a public IP address and port number, tracking those translations to keep 
individual sessions intact. 
Network Computer — A computer that communicates with a central data storage 
facility such as a server or RAID system.
NFS — Network File System. A network file system protocol that allows a user on a 
client computer to access files over a network as easily as if the network devices 
were attached to its local disks. Normally associated with UNIX systems. See also 
Protocol.
NTFS — NT File System. A file system, designed for Windows® NT, that supports 
long filenames, security access control, recovery, and other features.
NTP — Network Time Protocol. A protocol for synchronizing the clocks of computers 
and equipment over a network. See also Protocol.
Operating System — Software that allows users and programs installed on your 
system to communicate with computer hardware such as a hard drive.