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Welcome to BIOSMAN Inc! - Glossary V's

BIOSMAN's Glossary
V's
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #

V

V.24

An International Telecommunication Union specification defining interchange circuits

between data terminal and data communications equipment (for example, between a

PC and a modem). V.24 is equivalent to the RS-232 specification (see RS-232).

V.35

An International Telecommunication Union interface specification for data

transmitted at 48 kilobits per second.

value-added network (see VAN)

value-added reseller (see VAR)

value-added service (see VAS)

value on investment (see VOI)

VAN (value-added network)

A private network through which value-added carriers provide special data

transmission services.

VAR (value-added reseller)

An organization that buys equipment from a vendor at a discount, adds value (such

as application software packaged and sold with underlying system software) and

remarkets it.

variable bit rate (see VBR)

VAS (value-added service)

A service offered by a network or its resellers that generates additional revenue by

offering increased benefits to its subscribers.

VAX (Virtual Address Extension)

The Digital Equipment architecture that was the company's principal product line

prior to the Alpha. VAX was enormously successful in Digital's traditional engineering

and scientific customer base and, more significantly, enabled Digital to penetrate the

commercial data-processing and office-automation markets. In 1999, Compaq

Computer — which acquired Digital Equipment in 1998, and was itself acquired by

Hewlett-Packard in 2002 — announced plans to phase out the VAX platform in favor

of Alpha system products.

VB (Visual Basic)

A high-level programming language from Microsoft.

VBA (Visual Basic for Applications)

A version of Microsoft's Visual Basic used to create basic and customized programs.

 

VBR (variable bit rate)

An asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) quality of service category, defined by the

ATM Forum. Both real-time variable bit rate (rt-VBR) and non-real-time variable bit

rate (nrt-VBR) are defined. Apart from the traffic parameters for peak cell rate and

sustainable cell rate (which defines the average bit rate required by the application),

additional quality-of-service parameters — such as maximum cell transfer delay, cell

delay variation and maximum burst size — must be agreed on. The typical

application for which it is used is compressed voice and videoconferencing for rt-VBR,

and response-time-sensitive data such as Systems Network Architecture (SNA) for

nrt-VBR.

VBScript

A Microsoft proprietary language derived from Visual Basic. Like JavaScript, VBScript

is intended for use as a browser-based, server-side and administrative language.

Unlike JavaScript, support for VBScript in browsers is limited to Microsoft's Internet

Explorer.

VBUG (Voice Browser Usability Group)

A group within the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) developing voice portal

usability guidelines and best practices. See voice browser, voice portal and W3C.

VC (virtual channel)

In asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), a communications track between two nodes

giving the bandwidth needed for a virtual connection across the network.

VC (see virtual circuit)

VCR (videocassette recorder)

A device that records and plays videocassettes, typically used in conjunction with a

television set.

VDSL (very high-speed digital subscriber line)

Extremely high-speed digital subscriber line (DSL) connections over short distances.

Vendor Independent Messaging (see VIM)

vendor-managed inventory (see VMI)

vendor-neutral

A state in which no one vendor can control the definition, revision or distribution of a

specification. Vendor-neutral specifications encourage the development of competing

yet compatible implementations, freeing the purchaser to choose from a multitude of

vendors without suffering a loss of functionality.

VEP (vertical enterprise portal)

A portal that typically includes a business application and focuses on a specific

business function (e.g., investment or customer service) of an enterprise — unlike a

horizontal enterprise portal (HEP), which serves a broad enterprise population. See

portal and HEP.

Veronica

A former Internet search tool that used descriptive text; a precursor to today's Web

search engines.

 

vertical enterprise portal (see VEP)

vertical portal

A portal that provides content aggregation relevant to a specific industry, links to

related sites, collaboration capabilities and e-commerce services for relevant

products and services.

very high frequency (see VHF)

very high-speed digital subscriber line (see VDSL)

very large database (see VLDB)

very large-scale integration (see VLSI)

very long instruction word (see VLIW)

very small aperture terminal (see VSAT)

VF (voice frequency)

Any frequency within the audio-frequency range that is essential for the transmission

of speech of commercial quality — that is, 300 hertz (Hz) to 3,000 Hz.

VGA (Video Graphics Array)

A hardware display and software resolution standard for personal computers.

VHDL (VHSIC Hardware Description Language)

An industry standard format for describing very high-speed integrated circuit

(VHSIC) logic and behavior. See VHSIC.

VHF (very high frequency)

The range of radio frequencies between 30 and 300 megahertz.

VHS (video home system)

A videocassette format.

VHSIC (very high speed integrated circuit)

A category of integrated circuit (IC) technology. See IC.

VHSIC Hardware Description Language (see VHDL)

VICS (Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Standards)

A committee dedicated to the adoption of bar coding and electronic data interchange

(EDI) in the department store and mass merchandise industries. It has established

collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment (CPFR) standards for the

consumer goods industry that are published by the Uniform Code Council (UCC). See

CPFR, EDI and UCC.

videocassette recorder (see VCR)

videoconferencing

Communication by individuals or groups using systems that support image, voice

and data transfer over digital networks or telephone circuits. Videoconferencing

systems can take the form of large, dedicated units for group meetings or can be

integrated with desktop personal computers.

Video Graphics Array (see VGA)

video home system (see VHS)

video on demand (see VOD)

video random-access memory (see VRAM)

video server

A server that delivers streams of digital video and audio.

video signal

A signal comprising frequencies normally required to transmit pictorial information.

VIM (Vendor Independent Messaging)

An application programming interface (API) developed to support the exchange of

electronic mail among programs from different vendors. See API.

Vines

A network operating system (NOS) developed by Banyan Systems (now ePresence).

See NOS.

Virtual Address Extension (see VAX)

virtual channel (see VC)

virtual circuit

In packet switching, network facilities that appear to users to be an end-to-end

circuit, but are in fact a dynamically variable network connection in which sequential

user data packets may be routed differently during the course of a "virtual

connection." Transmission facilities may be shared by many virtual circuits

simultaneously.

virtual classroom

An online location where a course can be experienced. An instructor may lead or

facilitate the learning event, while students can merely participate or collaborate with

one another. These activities may occur synchronously or asynchronously. Virtualclassroom

functionality is similar to that used for conferencing, chat rooms, and

other forums in which participants exchange comments or engage in other online

interactions.

virtual enterprise

An enterprise integrating several ideals: outsourced noncore competencies; a focus

on core business strengths; little or no physical presence or infrastructure; a network

of business alliances; the exploitation of intellectual capital; and a heavy reliance on

telecommunications. Virtual enterprises have outsourced the physical processes and

administrative attributes of traditional business, and have expanded and combined

intellectual activities (e.g., problem solving) with standard business processes such

as marketing.

virtual LAN (see VLAN)

virtual local-area network (see VLAN)

Virtual Machine (see VM)

virtual machine (see VM)

Virtual Memory System (see VMS)

virtual path (see VP)

virtual private network (see VPN)

virtual reality

A computerized process, usually including special equipment, that projects the user

into a simulated three-dimensional space. It gives the user the sensation of being in

the simulated environment and the ability to respond to the simulation.

Virtual Reality Modeling Language (see VRML)

Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (see VRRP)

virtual storage

A feature that makes a computer appear to have a much larger memory than its real

memory. This is accomplished by software that moves pages rapidly in and out of a

high-speed, random-access storage device, usually a disk.

Virtual Storage Access Method (see VSAM)

Virtual Storage Extended (see VSE)

virtual tape subsystem (see VTS)

Virtual Telecommunications Access Method (see VTAM)

virus

Software used to infect a computer. After the virus code is written, it is buried within

an established program. Once that program is executed, the virus code is activated

and attaches copies of itself to other programs in the system. Infected programs

copy the virus to other programs.

Visual Basic (see VB)

Visual Basic for Applications (see VBA)

visualization

A technique used to illustrate information objects and their relationships on a

display. Strategic visualization graphically illustrates the strength of relationships by

the proximity of objects on the display. Advanced technology can make a significant

difference in users' ability to interface to large knowledge repositories. These

advances use the distance between objects on the display to reflect the similarity of

meaning, similarity of content or other relationships (such as association with a

group).

Visual J++

A Microsoft variant of the Java language.

Visual Studio

A Microsoft package of several application development (AD) tools with

complementary, albeit overlapping, focuses, including Visual Basic, Visual C++ and

Visual J++.

VLA (Volume License Agreement)

A software licensing option offered under the Novell "Customer Connections"

program, with an entry point that opens discounts to smaller organizations.

VLAN (virtual local-area network)

A set of systems that, regardless of higher-layer addressing or location, is designated

as a logical local-area network (LAN) and treated as a set of contiguous systems on a

single LAN segment. VLANs can be proprietary or standardized using the Institute of

Electrical and Electronics Engineers' 802.1q specification. Typical grouping

parameters for VLANs include the port number of the hub, switch or router, the

higher-layer protocol such as Internet Protocol (IP) or Internetwork Packet Exchange

(IPX), the Media Access Control (MAC) address, and the traditional subnet. The goal

of VLANs is to provide simpler administration and partitioning at the MAC layer. See

LAN, IP and IPX.

VLDB (very large database)

A database greater than 100 gigabytes.

VLIW (very long instruction word)

A processor architecture in which each data word contains multiple instructions. Used

in Intel's next-generation IA-64 products.

VLSI (very large-scale integration)

A technology that makes it possible to place the equivalent of between 100,000 and

1 million transistors on a chip.

VM (virtual machine)

A software implementation of a hardware-like architecture, which executes

predefined instructions in a fashion similar to a physical central processing unit

(CPU). A VM can be used to create a cross-platform computing environment that

loads and runs on computers independently of their underlying CPUs and operating

systems. A notable example is the Java Virtual Machine, the environment created on

a host computer to run Java applets. Although VMs have existed longer than Java,

Java has made VMs highly visible (see Java).

VM (Virtual Machine)

An IBM mainframe operating-system environment. VM manages a system so that all

its resources — processors, storage and input/output devices — are available to

many users at the same time. Each user has at his disposal the functional equivalent

of a real dedicated system. Because this functional equivalent is simulated by VM

and does not really exist, it is called a "virtual" machine.

 

VMI (vendor-managed inventory)

In the VMI process, the vendor assumes responsibility for managing the

replenishment of a customer's stock. Rather than a customer submitting orders, the

vendor will replenish stock as needed. This is sometimes referred to as suppliermanaged

or co-managed inventory.

VMS (Virtual Memory System)

A mainframe operating system developed by Digital Equipment (later acquired by

Compaq Computer, which in turn was acquired by Hewlett-Packard).

vocabulary-based transformation

A sophisticated form of transformation that leverages pre-built vocabularies to

enable semantic adjustments including, but not limited to, synonyms. An abstract or

conceptual vocabulary (or taxonomy or ontology) is the definition of a set of terms

(both elementary and composite), their structural relationships and their constraints

in a metadata-independent manner. See transformation.

VOD (video on demand)

A multimedia application with which a user can access motion or still video, which

may be available as public or private services.

VoD (voice over data)

Transmission of voice communication over a data network.

VoFR (voice over frame relay)

Transmission of voice communications over a frame relay data network.

VOI (value on investment)

An approach that sets out to measure the total business value derived from an

initiative — including "soft" benefits as well as "hard" financial returns.

voice browser

A system that allows telephone access to voice portal sites. It prepares and presents

information to callers, interprets their commands and enables them to navigate the

site. Architectures and implementations vary, but many will use VoiceXML or a

similar protocol to access the portal application. See voice portal and VoiceXML.

Voice Browser Usability Group (see VBUG)

Voice Extensible Markup Language (see VoiceXML)

voice frequency (see VF)

voice grade

A category of communications where bandwidth is equivalent to that of a telephone

line obtained through the public telephone network. The maximum potential

bandwidth of a voice-grade channel is approximately 20 kilohertz; however, most

voice grade channels in a transmission facility are usually spaced 4,000 hertz apart,

and not all of that bandwidth is generally available to a user due to the presence of

noise-limiting loading coils. The telephone network itself is usually defined in terms

of channels, with frequencies from 300 to 3,400 hertz.

 

voice mail

A service providing digitized voice message handling (also known as "voice

messaging"). Voice mail systems enable users to send, receive, and redirect voice

messages through office telephone systems and computers.

voice messaging (see voice mail)

voice over data (see VoD)

voice over frame relay (see VoFR)

voice over Internet Protocol (see VoIP)

voice portal

A system that uses advanced speech recognition technology to provide phone access

to information on the Internet. Key components of most voice portals include:

• Text-to-speech translation

• Information aggregation

• Categorization software

• Telephony and Internet interfaces

• Administrative interfaces

Optional components include software to support context-sensitive, personalized

assistance and support for VoiceXML. See voice browser and VoiceXML.

Voice Profile for Internet Mail (see VPIM)

voice recognition (see speech recognition)

voice response system — see VRU (voice response unit)

voice response unit (see VRU)

VoiceXML (Voice Extensible Markup Language)

A voice-technology-based version of Extensible Markup Language (XML) supported

by more than 200 companies. Created by AT&T, IBM, Lucent and Motorola, it is now

a specification of the World Wide Web Consortium. See voice browser, voice

portal and XML.

VoIP (voice over IP)

Transmission of voice communications over Internet Protocol (IP) data networks,

such as IP-based LANs, intranets or the Internet. Many carriers offer integrated

services such as voice and data over a single "pipe." However, VoIP still poses

several concerns such as voice quality, traffic congestion, slow acceptance of

standards, regulatory ambiguity and potential lack of future demand.

Volume License Agreement (see VLA)

volume purchase agreement (see VPA)

The Gartner Glossary of Information Technology Acronyms and Terms

© 2004 Gartner, Inc. and/or its Affiliates. All Rights Reserved. 372

Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Standards (see VICS)

VP (virtual path)

In asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), the bandwidth between two points on a

network used by one or more virtual channels.

VPA (volume purchase agreement)

An agreement between a computer vendor and a customer under which the vendor

grants discounted prices in return for the customer's commitment to purchase a

minimum quantity of products.

VPIM (Voice Profile for Internet Mail)

A protocol for the deployment of digital voice mail networking over the Internet.

VPN (virtual private network)

A system that delivers private communications services on a shared, public-network

infrastructure, and provides customized operating characteristics uniformly and

universally across an enterprise. The term "VPN "is generically used to refer to voice

VPNs. To avoid confusion, those used for data, rather than voice, communications

are more properly referred to as "data VPNs" or "IP VPNs." VPN service providers

define a VPN as a wide-area network of permanent virtual circuits, generally using

asynchronous transfer mode or frame relay to transport IP. VPN technology

providers often define "virtual private networking" as the use of encryption software

or hardware to bring privacy to communications over a public or untrusted data

network.

VRAM (video random-access memory)

A type of dynamic random access memory (DRAM) used in high-speed processing of

visual data. See DRAM.

VRML (Virtual Reality Modeling Language)

A means of rendering 3-D worlds from mathematical equations or descriptions. A

VRML browser can create shapes and text within a navigable 3-D context. The v.2.0

specifications further enhance the immersive experience, allowing for such real-world

events as interaction between "visitors" and collision detection when a user "bumps

into" an object or other users.

VRRP (Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol)

A network protocol that enables the same virtual Internet Protocol (IP) address to be

used by several routers in an IP network — one of which acts as the master router,

with the others acting as backups in case the master fails. Specifications for the

protocol are defined and developed by the VRRP Working Group of the Internet

Engineering Task Force.

VRU (voice response unit)

An automated telephone answering system (also known as a voice response system)

consisting of hardware and software that allows the caller to navigate through a

series of prerecorded messages and use a menu of options through the buttons on a

touch-tone telephone or through voice recognition.

VSAM (Virtual Storage Access Method)

IBM's access method for direct-access files. It is optimized for a virtual storage

environment. Multiple Virtual Storage (MVS), Information Management System

 (IMS), Customer Information Control System (CICS) and DB2 all use VSAM. See

DB2, CICS, IMS and MVS.

VSAT (very small aperture terminal)

A satellite-based networking service that has a low per site cost ($175 per month per

site or less). VSATs achieved their low cost by using shared, high-power satellite

capacity, asymmetric data flows and a star topology — enabling remote "earth

stations" at the sites to be as inexpensive as $5,000 (including installation). VSAT

economies improve as the number of remote or branch sites increase; a VSAT

network may connect hundreds or thousands of branch sites to a central site.

VSE (Virtual Storage Extended)

A multitasking, 370-architected IBM operating system akin to Multiple Virtual

Storage (MVS). VSE work runs in partitions rather than address spaces, but is largely

similar to MVS. See MVS.

VTAM (Virtual Telecommunications Access Method)

The main Systems Network Architecture (SNA) subsystem resident in an IBM

mainframe that manages session establishment and data flow between terminals and

application programs, or between application programs. See SNA.

VTS (virtual tape subsystem)

Tape library hardware and software extensions that utilize direct-access storage

device (DASD) buffers to multiply the tape device count, throughput and storage

density of tape library systems. See DASD.

V.x series

A series of International Telecommunication Union specifications pertaining to the

connection of digital equipment to the public switched telephone network (see V.24

and V.35).

Copyright © 2006 BIOSMAN. All rights reserved.