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TCP/IP Transmission Control

TCP (transmission control protocol) TCP/IP (transmission control protocol/ Internet protocol) telecommute Telnet... [Pg.167]

Communications and network protocois (e.g., TCP/IP [Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol], Ethernet, Token Ring)... [Pg.243]

Network protocols are standards that define how computers communicate. A typical protocol defines how computers should identify one another on a network, the form that the data should take in transit and how this information should be processed once it reaches its final destination. Protocols also define procedures for handling lost or damaged transmissions. Transmissions are sometimes described as "packets" of information. The most common network protocols include TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol), IPX (Internet Packet Exchange), AppleTalk, and DECnet (Digital Equipment Corporation network). [Pg.330]

TCP/IP Transmission control protocol implemented on top of the Internet protocol. The most commonly used protocol combination on the Internet. [Pg.339]

DCOM distributed component object model EDI electronic data interchange HTTP hypertext transfer protocol HOP internet inter-orb protocol JVM java virtual machine ORB object request broker SET secure electronic transaction TCP/IP transmission control protocol/in-ternet protocol... [Pg.206]

Middleware is the software used to network computers. It includes network-enabled operating systems and the underlying communications software, such as implementations of TCP/IP (transmission control protocol/Internet protocol), and router software, such as CISCO S lOS (originally Internetwork Operating System) software. Mainframe and server... [Pg.1662]

A group of computers can become networked once intercomputer communication is established. Prior to the 1980s, all system suppHers used proprietary protocols to network their systems. The recent introduction of standardized protocols is based on the ISO-OSI seven-layer model. The manufacturing automation protocol (MAP), which adopted the ISO-OSI standards as its basis, specifies a broadband backbone local area network (LAN). Originally intended for discrete component systems, MAP has evolved to address the integration of DCSs used in process control as well. TCP/IP (transmission control protocol/internet protocol) has been adopted for communication between nodes that have different operating systems. [Pg.1986]

The Internet is a network of computer networks based on the TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) protocols. Starting as the U.S. Department of Defense s ARPAnet circa 1970, it has grown to be an almost wholly privatized, global resource connecting more than 11,000 networks with 2 million host machines and 20-25 million computer users in more than 90 countries. It is estimated that Internet traffic has been growing at about 15% per month recently. In the U.S., one-third of all business mail in the last 5 years traveled over telephone wires, including both elearonic mail and facsimile. [Pg.306]

Most often found is the data communication system based on TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet Protocol) as well as IEEE 802 (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) protocols. By relying on the model of ISO OSI (International Organization for Standardization Open Systems Interconnection) the model of such a system can be presented in a manner shown in Figure 2. [Pg.2330]

Internet uses the TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Intemet Protocol), allowing communication between a broad range of different computers and operating systems. Internet provides the following services ... [Pg.128]

TCP, see Transmission Control Protocol TCP/IP, see Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet Protocol TD(5), 1780... [Pg.2786]

Remote login is the ability of a computer user in one location to establish an on-line connection with another computer elsewhere. Once the connection is established, the remote computer is used as if it were a hard-wired terminal of that system. Within the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) suite, this facility is called Telnet. Using Telnet, an Internet user can establish connections with a multitude of library catalogues, other bibliographic databases, university information systems, full text databases, data files (eg, statistics, oceanographic data, meteorological data, and geographic data), and other on-line services. Many of these connections are available to any Internet user and can be accessed without an account. [Pg.112]

TCP/IP Acronym for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A set of computer-to-computer communications protocols that encompass media access, packet transport, session communications, file transfer, e-mail, and terminal emulation. TCP/IP is supported by a very large number of hardware and software vendors and is available on many different computers from PCs to mainframes. [Pg.864]

Level of Transmission Control Protocol/Internct Protocol (TCP/IP) and Flealth Level 7 (F1L7) support. [Pg.214]

Transformation, data, 84, 85 Transformational leadership, 843—845 coUectivistic orientation in, 846—847 emotional-expressive basis of, 845—846 intrinsic motivation in, 847—848 Transform Technologies, 1050 Transition matrices, 2151—2152 Transmission Control Protocol/Intemet Protocol (TCP/IP), 235, 238 packet switching, 239 protocol layers in, 240... [Pg.2789]

TCP/IP Trademark. Transmission Control Protocol/Intemet Protocol the obligatory standard to be used by any system connecting to the Internet. The two protocols were orijpnally developed on the DARPA net. They were devised to optimize the performance of networks that are based on unreliable data-transmlsslon systems operating at relatively low data rates. [Pg.807]


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