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Term

Description

B (Bearer) Channel

A 64 kilobit-per-second (Kbps) circuit switched channel used for voice or data.

Back Channel

To enable interactive and Pay TV services, a direct communication channel between the broadcaster or service provider and the consumer is needed. Normally this "Back" or "Return channel " is realized via the normal telephone line.

Backplane

System interface connecting two or more boards.

Band-Pass Filter

A filter that passes signals that are between an upper and a lower frequency boundaries.

Bandwidth

Bandwidth is a measure of the carrying capacity (or size/width) of a communication (or operating or transmission) channel. This equates to the amount of data that can be transmitted in a fixed amount of time, or it is the amount of data that an application can process. For digital devices, the bandwidth is usually expressed in bits per second (bps) or bytes per second (BPS). For analog devices, the bandwidth is the difference between the highest and lowest frequencies of a band that can be passed by a transmission medium without undue distortion, and can be expressed in cycles per second, or Hertz (Hz).

Bandwidth (broadband, narrowband)

The speed of data transmission depends on the available bandwidth of the transmission channel. Narrow band channels provide data transfer rates of 100 kbit/s (NA.MHz), whereas broad band channels allow transfer of >1 Mbit/s (NA.MHz).

Baseband

Using entire bandwidth of a medium to carry a single signal.  

Baseband Controller (Bluetooth)

The baseband controller is responsible for all of the digital data processing required for radio transmission. This includes speech coding of Synchronous Connection Oriented (SCO) data streams, data whitening (essentially simplistic encryption for rudimentary security), robust 128-bit encryption if requested, packetization, and error detection and correction for both the packet header and the payload.

An additional responsibility is the calculation of the Frequency Hopping (FH) pattern for the radio to use. Bluetooth hops uses frequency hopping spread spectrum transmissions that hop 1600 times per second across 79 different 1MHz channels in the 2.4GHz ISM band (2.402GHz - 2.480GHz). This scheme provides excellent noise immunity and graceful signal degradation. The Bluetooth FH pattern is algorithmically determined (calculated) as a function of the Master device ID which is unique for each and every Bluetooth device.  

Baud

Byte at Unit Density. It is a measure of the speed of transmission of data per second. It can also be measured as the number of signal level changes per second where each signal level contains one (or more) bits of information.  

BAV (HAVi)

BAV is an acronym for Base AV (device).

BAV devices are simple and inexpensive devices that do not have sufficient local resources to implement all the HAVi APIs and protocols. BAVs therefore rely on the more powerful FAV (Full AV) devices to install and execute their DCM.

A typical example of a BAV would be a digital still picture camera.

BAV devices are 'HAVi aware' but need to implement only a very small part of the HAVi protocols.

BAV devices can always be directly connected to the HAVi network and they carry within themselves their own DCM written in Java. So, provided that there is at least one FAV (Full AV) in the HAVi network with sufficient resources to install the DCM, a BAV is controllable.

BER

Bit Error Ratio. It is the measure of transmission quality, thus indicating the number of incorrect bits in a given bit stream compared to the total number of bits transmitted in a given duration time.  

BGA

Acronym for Ball Grid Array. A leadless, surface mounted package with high I/O count.  

Binary

Pertaining to a number system that has just two unique digits. For most purposes, we use the decimal number system, which has ten unique digits, 0 through 9. All other numbers are then formed by combining these ten digits. Computers are based on the binary numbering system, which consists of just two unique numbers, 0 and 1. All operations that are possible in the decimal system (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) are equally possible in the binary system.  

Bit

Acronym for BInary digiT. The smallest unit of information in a digital system that can either be a 1 or 0.  

Bit rate

The rate at which a storage medium delivers a compressed bitstream to a decoder's input.  

Bitmap

An array of dots, normally containing an image formed by a pattern of "white" dots and "black" dots.  

Bitmap Font

A font in which each character is stored as an array of dots, the pattern of which forms a letter or symbol.  

Bitmap Graphic

An array of dots, in which the pattern of the dots forms a picture or other non-text item such as a line.  

Bits

Short for binary digit, the smallest unit of information on a machine. The term was first used in 1946 by John Tukey, a leading statistician and adviser to five presidents. A single bit can hold only one of two values: 0 or 1. More meaningful information is obtained by combining consecutive bits into larger units. For example, a byte is composed of 8 consecutive bits.  

Bitstream (Bitmap)

The bitstream is a binary representation of an implemented FPGA design or the designer's logic. The bit-stream is generated by the Xilinx software tool 'BITGen' and the output file has <.bit> file extension. It contains the configuration information used to program an FPGA.  

Block Cipher

TA cipher that encrypts a block of data all at once, and then goes on to the next block.  

Block Code

Converts a fixed length of K data bits to a fixed length N code word, where N > K. The rate of the code is K/N.

Block RAM

Dedicated blocks of memory available on-chip.  

Blocked Calls

Attempted calls that are not connected because either all lines to the central offices are in use; or all connecting paths through the PBX/switch are in use.  

BlockSelectRAM

See BlockRAM  

Bluetooth

Bluetooth is a global de facto standard for wireless connectivity. Based on a low-cost, short-range radio link, Bluetooth cuts the cords that used to tie up digital devices such as mobile PCs, mobile phones and other portable devices. The Bluetooth Special Interest Group is an industry group consisting of leaders in the telecommunications and computing industries that are driving development of the technology and bringing it to market.

When two Bluetooth equipped devices come within 10 meters range of each other, they can establish a connection together. And because Bluetooth utilizes a radio-based link, it doesn't require a line-of-sight connection in order to communicate. Your laptop could send information to a printer in the next room, or your microwave could send a message to your mobile phone telling you that your meal is ready. Ericsson, the principal inventor of Bluetooth, borrowed the name from Harald Bluetooth (son of Gorm) who was the King of Denmark circa 900AD.

Boundary Scan

It facilitates the testing, device programming and debug at the device, board and systems level. Also known as IEEE/ANSI standard 1149.1.  

Bouquet

A collection of services marketed as a single entity.  

BPS

Bits per second. Basic unit of data transmission.  

BPSK

Binary Phase Shift Keying. Digital DSB suppressed carrier modulation.

BRAN

Broadband Radio Access Network  

BRI (Basic Rate Interface)

Basic Rate ISDN. Services targeted at home and small business users. BRI service is delivered over a single twisted pair, the same wiring that is used to deliver POTS. It includes three fully duplex data channels. Two of these, referred to as Bearer or B channels, are used to carry voice or data. The third, the D channel, is used to communicate control information between the central office switch and the ISDN terminal device.  

Bridge

A bridge is a device used to connect two distinct segments and transmit traffic between them, such as local-area networks (LANs) or segments of the same LAN by forwarding packets across connections at the Media Access Control (MAC is a sublayer of the data link layer of the OSI model). The two LANs being connected may be alike or dissimilar, i.e., from one physical medium to another. For example, a bridge can connect an Ethernet network with a wireless LAN network. A bridge works at the data-link level of a network, copying a data frame from one network to the next network along the communications path. Bridges can make minor changes to the frame before forwarding it(such as adding and deleting some fields from the frame header). Unlike routers, bridges are protocol-independent and simply forward packets without analyzing and rerouting messages. Consequently, they're faster than routers, but also less versatile.  

Broadband

Sharing the bandwidth of a medium to carry more than one signal; typically data rates above 1.5/2.0 Mbps.  

Broadband Access

Quite simply it is a high speed (greater than 128Kbps), always on connection to the Internet. It allows simultaneous up-Link and downlink communication and is made possible by digital modems. Broadband access technologies include xDSL, cable, satellite and ISDN.  

Broadband, Broadband Communications

Broadband refers to a communications systems in which the medium of transmission (such as a wire or fiber-optic cable) carries multiple messages at a time, each message is modulated on its own carrier frequency by means of modems and transmission speeds are at or exceed 128 Kbps Any of several methods such as cable, xDSL, ISDN or cable are examples of broadband technologies for sending Internet data into the home at high-speeds.  

Broadcaster

An organization which assembles a sequence of events or programs to be delivered to the viewer based upon a schedule.  

Bubble Jet

Canon's trade name for its thermal drop on demand ink jet printer technology. The ink is heated, producing bubble that expands and ejects the ink out of the nozzle. As the bubble cools, the vacuum created draws fresh ink back into the nozzle.  

Built-in Font

See resident font.  

Burst Transaction

Any transaction consisting of more than one data phase.  

Bytes

Abbreviation for binary term, a unit of storage capable of holding a single character. On almost all modern computers, a byte is equal to 8 bits.

 
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