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Glossary_ 65
glossary
 
The following glossary helps you get familiar with the product by 
understanding the terminologies commonly used with printing as well 
as mentioned in this user’s guide.
802.11
802.11 is a set of standards for wireless local area network (WLAN) 
communication, developed by the IEEE LAN/MAN Standards 
Committee (IEEE 802). 
802.11b/g/n
802.11b/g/n can share same hardware and use the 2.4 GHz band. 
802.11b supports bandwidth up to 11 Mbps, 802.11n supports 
bandwidth up to 150 Mbps. 802.11b/g/n devices may occasionally suffer 
interference from microwave ovens, cordless telephones, and Bluetooth 
devices.
Access point
Access Point or Wireless Access Point (AP or WAP) is a device that 
connects wireless communication devices together on wireless local 
area networks (WLAN), and acts as a central transmitter and receiver of 
WLAN radio signals. 
ADF
An Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) is a scanning unit that will 
automatically feed an original sheet of paper so that the machine can 
scan some amount of the paper at once. 
AppleTalk
AppleTalk is a proprietary suite of protocols developed by Apple, Inc for 
computer networking. It was included in the original Macintosh (1984) 
and is now deprecated by Apple in favor of TCP/IP networking.
BIT Depth
A computer graphics term describing the number of bits used to 
represent the color of a single pixel in a bitmapped image. Higher color 
depth gives a broader range of distinct colors. As the number of bits 
increases, the number of possible colors becomes impractically large for 
a color map. 1-bit color is commonly called as monochrome or black and 
white.
BMP
A bitmapped graphics format used internally by the Microsoft Windows 
graphics subsystem (GDI), and used commonly as a simple graphics file 
format on that platform.
BOOTP
Bootstrap Protocol. A network protocol used by a network client to 
obtain its IP address automatically. This is usually done in the bootstrap 
process of computers or operating systems running on them. The 
BOOTP servers assign the IP address from a pool of addresses to each 
client. BOOTP enables 'diskless workstation' computers to obtain an IP 
address prior to loading any advanced operating system.
CCD
Charge Coupled Device (CCD) is a hardware which enables the scan 
job. CCD Locking mechanism is also used to hold the CCD module to 
prevent any damage when you move the machine.
Collation
Collation is a process of printing a multiple-copy job in sets. When 
collation is selected, the device prints an entire set before printing 
additional copies.
Control Panel
A control panel is a flat, typically vertical, area where control or 
monitoring instruments are displayed. They are typically found in front of 
the machine. 
Coverage
It is the printing term used for a toner usage measurement on printing. 
For example, 5% coverage means that an A4 sided paper has about 5% 
image or text on it. So, if the paper or original has complicated images or 
lots of text on it, the coverage will be higher and at the same time, a 
toner usage will be as much as the coverage.
CSV
Comma Separated Values (CSV). A type of file format, CSV is used to 
exchange data between disparate applications. The file format, as it is 
used in Microsoft Excel, has become a de facto standard throughout the 
industry, even among non-Microsoft platforms.
DADF
A Duplex Automatic Document Feeder (DADF) is a scanning unit that 
will automatically feed and turn over an original sheet of paper so that 
the machine can scan on both sides of the paper.
Default
The value or setting that is in effect when taking a printer out of its box 
state, reset, or initialized.
DHCP
A Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is a client-server 
networking protocol. A DHCP server provides configuration parameters 
specific to the DHCP client host requesting, generally, information 
required by the client host to participate on an IP network. DHCP also 
provides a mechanism for allocation of IP addresses to client hosts.