i., bilg. modem

listen to the pronunciation of i., bilg. modem
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
modem
(from a combination of MOdulate and DEModulate) electronic equipment consisting of a device used to connect computers by a telephone line
MOdulator/DEModulator Equipment that converts digital signals to analog signals and vice versa Modems are used to send data signals (digital) over the telephone network, which is usually analog The modem modulates the 1s and 0s into tones that can be carried by the phone network At the other end, the demodulator part of the modem converts the tones back into digital 1s and 0s
MOdulator/DEModulator A device that converts between digital signals from the computer and analog signals for communication over a telephone line
Acronym for modulator-demodulator A modem is a device or program that enables a computer to transmit data over telephone lines Computer information is stored digitally, whereas information transmitted over telephone lines is transmitted in the form of analog waves A modem converts between these two forms
{i} device which allows the transfer of data through a telephone line from one computer to another (Computers)
A device that encodes digital computer signals into analog/analogue telephone signals and vice versa and allows computers to communicate over a phone line
(Modulator/Demodulator) - a device that converts digital data from a computer to an analog signal (typically for transmitting on a telephone line) It also converts telephone analog signals to digital data for use by the computer
A device that allows computers to communicate with each other over telephone lines or other delivery systems by changing digital signals to telephone signals for transmission and then back to digital signals Modems come in different speeds: the higher the speed, the faster the data is transmitted
A device that connects your computer to other computers via phone line
A device that enables a computer to transmit information over a standard telephone line Modems can transmit at different speeds or data transfer rates See also baud rate, bps
A modem converts digital signals from a computer or other digital device to analog signals (modulates) for transmission over PSTN lines It converts incoming analog signals back to digital signals (demodulates) for the receiving computer or other digital device
modulator/demodulator, a device that can convert digital signals from a computer into analog sound signals for transmission over a telephone line, and vice versa
A hardware device that allows computers to communicate with each other by transmitting signals over telephone lines, enabling what is called "dial-up access " Modems come in different speeds The higher the speed, the faster the data are transmitted The fastest widely available modems are "56K" (or 56 kilobits per second)
A modem allows two computers to communicate over ordinary phone lines It derives its name from modulate / demodulate, the process by which it converts digital computer data back and forth for use with an analog phone line
Modulator/demodulator A device connected between a computer and a telephone line It consists of a modulator that converts digital computer signals into audio signals for transmission over the telephone line and a corresponding demodulator to convert the incoming audio signals into digital form
A device allowing computers to communicate over telephone lines Acronym for MODulate-DEModulate, meaning that analog (waveform) information is modulated to digital information and vice versa The current generation of modems is Hays-compatible, operates at 56KB/sec, and supports the V 90 standard
Acronym for modulator/de-modulator A hardware device that allows a computer to transmit and receive information over telephone lines A modem converts digital data from computers into analog data that can be transmitted over the telephone lines Traditional modems can carry data at speeds of up to 56Kbps
That thing that made all those horrible bleeping noises when you logged in to read this Short for modulator/demodulator: a device that converts data between digital and analogue formats Computers "think" digitally, but telephone lines "talk" in analogue, so to send data between computers there has to be a modem at each end; the sending modem converts from digital to analogue and the receiving modem converts it back to digital
(pronounced MOE-dim): Shortened form of "modulator- demodulator " A device that allows computers to communicate with each other via telephone lines, cellular signals or television cables To send information from one computer to another, a modem converts digital signals from a computer into analog signals that can be sent over telephone lines On the receiving end, the modem converts the analog signals back into digital ones that can be understood by the computer