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Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions
Industrie: Telecommunications
Number of terms: 29235
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
ATIS is the leading technical planning and standards development organization committed to the rapid development of global, market-driven standards for the information, entertainment and communications industry.
Installed capacity of a system which is not normally utilized but can be made available when required.
Industry:Telecommunications
Intelligence derived from data collected by radar.
Industry:Telecommunications
Intelligence information derived from electromagnetic emissions associated with the testing and operational deployment of foreign aerospace, surface, and subsurface systems. 2. Technical information and intelligence information derived from the intercept of foreign instrumentation signals by other than the intended recipients. Foreign instrumentation signals intelligence is a category of signals intelligence. Note: Foreign instrumentation signals include but are not limited to signals from telemetry, beaconry, electronic interrogators, tracking/fusing/ arming/firing command systems, and video data links.
Industry:Telecommunications
Intelligence information other than signals intelligence derived from the optical monitoring of the electromagnetic spectrum from ultraviolet (0. 01 m) through the far infrared (1000 m. )
Industry:Telecommunications
Intensity modulation of an optical source, e.g., LED or ILD, directly, without first modulating the signal of interest onto an electrical carrier wave.
Industry:Telecommunications
Interfacing with the network via a physical wired connection. This can be employed by either a wired or wireless terminal operating in a wired mode via a standard physical interface.
Industry:Telecommunications
Interference at a higher level than that defined as permissible interference and which has been agreed upon between two or more administrations without prejudice to other administrations.
Industry:Telecommunications
Interference caused by a single-frequency source. Note 1: An example of single-frequency interference is interference in a transmission channel induced by a 60-Hz source. Note 2: The interference caused by the single-frequency source may have other frequencies and may also appear in many channels.
Industry:Telecommunications
Interference caused by another signal operating on the same channel.
Industry:Telecommunications
Interference resulting from noise or unwanted signals entering a device by conductive coupling, i.e., by direct coupling. 2. An undesired voltage or current generated within, or conducted into, a receiver, transmitter, or associated equipment, and appearing at the antenna terminals.
Industry:Telecommunications