The following terms and abbreviations are defined as
they are used in the context of Blueworx Voice Response. If you
do not find the term or abbreviation you are looking for, see IBM
Dictionary of Computing, McGraw-Hill, 1994 or the AIX:
Topic Index and Glossary, SC23–2513.
Special Characters
- μ-law
- The companding algorithm that is used primarily in North America
and Japan when converting from analog to digital speech data. (Compand
is a contraction of compress and expand.) Contrast with A-law.
Numerics
- 2 B-channel transfer feature
- See Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) two B-channel transfer.
- 3270 host application
- An application on the IBM System/370™ System/390®, or AS/400®
that interacts with terminals that support the 3270 data stream.
- 3270 script language
- See script language.
- 3270 server
- A function of Blueworx Voice Response that
provides a software interface between Blueworx Voice Response and IBM
System/370, System/390, or AS/400 architecture business applications
that interact with terminals that support the 3270 data stream. Contrast
with custom server.
- 5ESS
- (1) A Lucent Technologies switch. (2) The ISDN protocol that is
used on the 5ESS switch. It provides 23 B-channels and a D-channel
over a T1 trunk.
- 6312 Digital Trunk Telephony Adapter (DTTA)
- See Digital Trunk Telephony
Adapter.
- 6313 Digital Trunk Telephony Adapter (DTTA) with Blind Swap Cassette
(BSC)
- See Digital Trunk Telephony
Adapter with Blind Swap Cassette.
A
- A-law
- The companding algorithm that is used in Europe, Latin America,
and other countries when converting from analog to digital speech
data. (Compand is a contraction of compress and expand.) Contrast
with μ-law.
- access protocol
- A protocol that is used between an external subscriber and a switch
in a telephone network.
- ACD
- See automatic call distributor.
- ACL
- See application connectivity
link.
- action
- See state table action.
- Action Palette
- An area that contains folders and icons that can be selected to
create state table actions.
- Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
- In HACMP, the Internet communication protocol that dynamically
maps Internet addresses to physical (hardware) addresses on local
area networks. Limited to networks that support hardware broadcast.
The usr/sbin/cluster/etc/clinfo.rc script,
which is invoked by the clinfo daemon whenever a network or node event
occurs, updates the system ARP cache. This ensures that the IP addresses
of all cluster nodes are updated after an IP address takeover. The
script can be further customized to handle site-specific needs.
- administrator profile
- Data that describes a Blueworx Voice Response user.
Information that is in an administrator profile includes ID, password,
language preference, and access privileges.
- ADSI
- See analog display services interface.
- ADSI telephone
- A “smart” telephone that can interpret and return ADSI data.
- advanced intelligent network (AIN)
- A telephone network that expands the idea of the intelligent network (IN) to provide
special services more efficiently; for example, by giving users the
ability to program many of the services themselves.
- AIN
- See advanced intelligent network.
- alarm
- Any condition that Blueworx Voice Response thinks
worthy of documenting with an error
message. Strictly, the term alarm should
include only red (immediate attention) and yellow (problem condition),
but it is also used to refer to green (a red or yellow message has
been cleared) and white (information) conditions. Contrast with alert.
- alert
- A message that is sent to a central monitoring station, as the
result of an alarm. Contrast with alarm.
- alternate mark inversion (AMI)
- A T1 line coding scheme in which binary 1 bits are represented
by alternate positive and negative pulses and binary 0 bits by spaces
(no pulse). The purpose is to make the average dc level on the line
equal to zero.
- AMI
- See alternate mark inversion.
- analog
- Data in the form of continuously variable signals, such as voice
or light signals.
- analog display services interface (ADSI)
- A Bellcore signaling protocol that is used with existing voice
networks. ADSI supports analog transmission of voice and text-based
information between a host or switch, voice mail system, service bureau,
or similar, and a subscriber's ADSI-compatible screen telephone.
A single voice-grade telephony channel is shared between voice and
data, using a technique by which the channel is taken over for the
transmission of modem-encoded data.
- ANI
- See automatic number identification.
- annotation
- In speech recognition, an alphanumeric string that is used to
mark a grammar when it is defined. When the grammar is used in an
application, both the word and the alphanumeric string are returned
to the application.
- announcement-only greeting
- In voice mail, a greeting that
does not give the caller a
chance to leave a voice message.
- application
- A (usually) customer-written program or set of programs that might
consist of one or more state tables or custom servers that are running
on Blueworx Voice Response,
with associated voice segments. See voice
application.
- application connectivity link (ACL)
- A service that transmits out-of-band information between Blueworx Voice Response and the
Siemens Hicom 300 switch.
- application profile
- Data that describes initial actions that are to be performed when
the telephone is answered. Information in an application profile indicates
to the channel process which state table to load.
- application server interface (ASI)
- The principal software component of Blueworx Voice Response that
manages the real-time channel processing.
- application server platform (ASP)
- A platform that is used for Web and voice applications for e-business.
- ASI
- See application server interface.
- ASP
- See application server platform.
- audio name
- The audible name that relates to a specific application profile
ID and mailbox.
- auto-attendant
- Automated attendant. A voice application that answers incoming
calls and asks callers which number or other service they would like.
- automatic call distributor (ACD)
- A telephone system feature that automatically queues and processes
inbound calls according to predefined rules. For example, a call might
be routed to the agent whose line has been idle longest.
- automatic number identification (ANI)
- A service available in the U.S. that provides the telephone number
of the calling party. It is generated by the caller's originating
central office switch, sent to a telephone network carrier if required,
then sent directly either to a switch or to a voice processing system.
- autostubbing
- A state table icon view utility that automatically converts lines
into stubs when they cross
a specified number of columns.
B
- B8ZS
- Bipolar with 8-zero substitution. A T1 line code that is required
for 64Kb channels such as ISDN.
- B-channel
- See bearer channel.
See also Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) .
- background music
- Any audio data that is to be played on a music channel.
- barge-in
- The capability that allows a prompt to be interrupted by an utterance
that is then passed to a speech recognizer. See also cut-through channel.
- baseforms
- The set of phonetic pronunciations that are associated with a
grammar. In WebSphere Voice Server, the IBM dictionary of pronunciations
is used.
- basic rate interface (BRI)
- The means of ISDN access that is normally used by private subscribers.
It provides two B-channels of 64 Kb per second and one D-channel of
16 Kb per second for signaling. This is often known as 2B+D. Contrast
with primary rate interface (PRI).
- beans
- Java beans with which you can build voice applications to use
the services of Blueworx Voice Response on any
platform.
- bearer channel
- In an ISDN interface, a duplex channel for transmitting data or
digital voice between the terminal and the network. The B-channel
operates at 64 Kb per second.
- bearer service
- The type of service that defines how an ISDN connection will be
used. Typical bearer services are speech telephony, 64 Kb per second
data, and high-quality speech.
- blind transfer
- A type of call transfer in which the call is routed to another
extension and the original call is ended. No check is made to determine
whether the transferred call is answered or if the number is busy.
Contrast with screened transfer.
- bnf
- Abbreviation for Backus-Naur Form, which is used to describe
the syntax of a given language and its notation. In speech recognition,
a special adaptation of grammar representation that is specified by Speech Recognition Control Language (SRCL) (pronounced
“circle”).
- bos
- Base Operating System.
- bps
- bits per second.
- BRI
- See basic rate interface.
- bridge
- See DVT bridge.
- British Approvals Board for Telecommunications
- The British standards organization that is responsible for approval
of equipment that is to be attached to the PSTN.
C
- cadence
- The modulated and rhythmic recurrence of an audio signal. For
example, a series of beeps or a series of rings.
- call
- Telephone call. Often used to mean a single run-time instance
of a voice application.
- call center
- A central point at which all inbound calls are handled by a group
of individuals in a controlled sequential way. Call centers are usually
a front end to a business such as airline ticketing or mail order.
- Call Control eXtensible Markup Language (CCXML)
- Language designed to provide telephony call control support for
VoiceXML or other dialog systems. Refer to the CCXML forum web site
at http://www.w3.org/TR/ccxml
- call forwarding
- The process of sending incoming calls to a different number.
- called party
- Any person, device, or system that receives a telephone call.
Contrast with caller.
- caller
- (1) Any person, device, or system that makes a telephone call.
(2) Often used to refer to any user of a voice application, although Blueworx Voice Response might
have made an outbound call and the user is really the called party. (3) In voice mail,
any person who makes a telephone call to a subscriber. Contrast with user.
- calling line identification presentation (CLIP)
- An ISDN supplementary service that advises the called party of
the caller's number; for example, by displaying it on a telephone
display panel.
- CallPath
- Software that provides basic computer-telephony integration (CTI)
enablement and comprehensive CTI functionality. This includes access
to, and management of, inbound and outbound telecommunications.
- call session
- The sequence of events that occurs from the time a call is started
to the time all activities related to answering and processing the
call are completed.
- call transfer
- A series of actions that directs a call to another telephone number.
See also dual-line call transfer.
- CAS
- See channel associated signaling.
- cascading resources
- Resources that can be taken over by more than one node. A takeover
priority is assigned to each configured cluster resource group in
a per-node way. In the event of a takeover, the node with the highest
priority gets the resource group. If that node is unavailable, the
node with the next-highest priority gets the resource group, and so
on.
- CAS tone
- Customer Premise Equipment Alerting Signal tone. In ADSI, this
tone is sent to the ADSI telephone to switch the phone to data mode.
- CBX
- See computerized branch exchange.
- CCH
- See Comité de Coordination de
l'Harmonisation.
- CCITT
- See Comité Consultatif International
Télégraphique et Téléphonique.
- CCS
- See common channel signaling
(CCS).
- central office (CO)
- A telephone switching system that resides in the telephone service
provider's network. Different types of central office switches
exist, depending upon the role of the switch in the telephone network.
Commonly, a central office switch connects customer lines to other
customer lines or trunks, and is the point at which local subscriber
lines end for switching to other lines or trunks.
- central registry
- A component of the Licence Use Management network topology. A
server's database that logs requests for licenses, upgrades for
licenses, and journals all license activity in a tamper-proof auditable
file.
- CEPT
- See Conference Européenne des
Administrations des Postes et Télécommunications.
- CGI
- See Common Gateway Interface.
- channel
- One of the 24 channels that are on a T1 trunk, or one of the 30
channels that are on an E1 trunk. See also speech recognition session, music channel.
- channel-associated signaling (CAS)
- A method of communicating telephony supervisory or line signaling
(on-hook and off-hook) and address signaling on T1 and E1 digital
links. The signaling information for each traffic (voice) channel
is transmitted in a signaling channel that is permanently associated
with the traffic channel. On T1 links, supervisory signaling is sent
in the traffic channel by using robbed-bit
signaling (RBS). On E1 links, a separate channel is used
to send signaling. Address signaling can be transmitted either in
the signaling channel (out-of-band) or in the traffic channel (in-band).
Contrast with common channel signaling
(CCS).
- channel bank
- A device that converts an analog line signal to a digital trunk
signal.
- channel number
- The identifying number that is assigned to a licensed channel
on the T1 or E1 trunk that connects Blueworx Voice Response to the
switch, channel bank, or channel service unit.
- channel process (CHP)
- The AIX process that runs the logic of the state table; each active
caller session has one active channel process.
- channel service unit (CSU)
- A device that is used to connect a digital phone line to a multiplexer,
a channel bank, or directly to another device that generates a digital
signal. A CSU performs specific line-conditioning and equalization
functions, and responds to loopback commands that are sent from the
CO.
- CHP
- See channel process.
- CIC
- See circuit identification code.
- CICS
- See customer information control
system.
- circuit identification code (CIC)
- A 12-bit number that identifies a trunk and channel on which a
call is carried.
- clear message
- A message that is displayed by Blueworx Voice Response to tell
the operator that a red or yellow error message has been cleared.
- client node
- In a single system image (SSI), a Blueworx Voice Response system
that handles interactions with callers. A client node must have a
telephony connection. It does not store application or voice data;
it gets data from the server node of the SSI.
- CLIP
- See calling line identification
presentation.
- cluster
- Loosely-coupled collection of independent systems (nodes) that
are organized into a network to share resources and to communicate
with each other. HACMP defines relationships among cooperating systems
where peer cluster nodes provide the services that a cluster node
offers if that node cannot do so.
- cluster configuration
- User definition of all cluster components. Component information
is stored in the Object Data Manager.
Components include cluster name and ID, and information about member
nodes, adapters, and network modules.
- CO
- See central office.
- codec
- Refers to adapters that compress and decompress video files. The
letters "codec" represent "compression/decompression"; in the past,
they represented "coder/decoder."
- Comité de Coordination de l'Harmonization
- The CEPT committee responsible for standards.
- Comitato Elettrotechnico Italiano
- The Italian standards organization responsible for signaling protocols.
- Comité Consultatif International Télégraphique et Téléphonique
(CCITT)
- This organization has been renamed and is now known as the International
Telecommunications Union - Telecommunication Standardization Sector
(ITU-T).
- common channel signaling (CCS)
- A method of communicating telephony information and line signaling
events (for example, call setup and call clearing) on a dedicated
signaling channel. The signaling channel is either a predefined channel
on an E1 or T1 digital link, or a completely separate link between
the switch and Blueworx Voice Response.
For data integrity and reliability, the information is usually communicated
using a data link protocol. The telephone information and line signaling
events are sent as data packets. SS7 and ISDN are common-channel signaling
protocols. Contrast with channel
associated signaling.
- Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
- An interface to programs that provide services on the world wide
Web.
- compiled grammar file
- A grammar in binary
format that was built by the WebSphere Voice Server grammar development
tools.
- compound license
- In License Use Management, a type of license that allows a system
administrator to generate license passwords for a given number of
licenses. A compound license can generate either nodelocked or non-nodelocked
licenses, but not both
- computer-telephony integration (CTI)
- The use of a general-purpose computer to issue commands to a telephone
switch to transfer calls and provide other services. Typically, CTI
is used in call centers.
- computerized branch exchange (CBX)
- A computer-driven, digital communications controller that provides
telephone communication between internal stations and external networks.
- Conférence Européenne des Administrations des Postes et Télécommunications
(CEPT)
- European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations.
- configuration file
- See parameter file.
- configuration parameter
- A variable that controls
the behavior of the system or the behavior of all applications that
are running on the system. See parameter
file, system parameter.
- container window
- A window that lists the names of all existing objects of the same
type.
- context
- A set of one or more grammars that is enabled and used during
a recognition action. The grammars are specified by a FILELIST file.
Parameters that influence the recognition, such as the maximum initial
silence period and the ending silence period, are also defined by
the context. More than one context can be enabled for a recognition.
- context name
- The name given to a context in a context profile that is used
for WebSphere Voice Server.
- context profile
- Describes to the WebSphere Voice Server process which contexts
should be loaded into an engine. A WebSphere Voice Response for Windows application
specifies which context profiles to load into the engine it has reserved.
- context type
- Indicates to the recognition engine how to interpret the grammar
file. Possible types are: VOCAB_FILE, GRAMMAR_FILE, TEXT, MNR_FILE,
MNR, PERSONAL_FILE, PERSONAL_WDS, BASEFORM_FILE.
- continuous speech recognition
- Recognition of words that are spoken in a continuous stream. Unlike
isolated or discrete word recognition, users do not have to pause
between words.
- conversation
- See speech recognition session.
- CPE
- See customer premises equipment.
- CSU
- See channel service unit .
- CTI
- See computer-telephony integration.
- customer information control system (CICS)
- A licensed program that enables transactions that are entered
at remote workstations to be processed concurrently by user-written
application programs. It includes facilities for building, using,
and maintaining databases.
- custom server
- A C language or C++ language program that provides data manipulation
and local or remote data stream, database, or other services that
are additional to those that the state table interface provides. Custom
servers provide an interface between Blueworx Voice Response and business
applications, functions, or other processes to give callers access
to business information and voice processing functions such as speech
recognition.
- customer premises equipment (CPE)
- Telephony equipment that is on the premises of a business or domestic
customer of the telephone company. An example is a private branch
exchange (PBX).
- cut-through channel
- A channel of voice data that has been passed through echo-cancellation
algorithms. The channel provides echo-canceled voice data that can
then be used by the engine in a recognition attempt. This is similar
to barge-in.
D
- daemon
- In the AIX operating system, a program that runs unattended to
perform a standard service.
- database server node
- In a single system image (SSI), a Blueworx Voice Response system
that contains the Blueworx Voice Response DB2®
database. This is usually the same node as the voice server node.
- DBIM
- The internal database manager of Blueworx Voice Response.
- DBS
- The database server of Blueworx Voice Response.
- DCBU
- See D-channel backup.
- D-channel
- See delta channel.
- D-channel backup (DCBU)
- An ISDN NFAS configuration where two of the T1 facilities have
a D-channel, one of which is used for signaling, and the other as
a backup if the other fails. See also non-facility
associated signaling.
- DDI
- See direct inward dialing.
- DDS
- See production system.
- delay start
- A procedure that is used with some channel-associated signaling
protocols to indicate when a switch or PABX is ready to accept address
signaling. After seizure, the switch sends off-hook until it is ready
to accept address signaling, at which time it sends on-hook. Contrast
with immediate start and wink start.
- delta channel
- In an ISDN interface, the D-channel or delta channel carries the
signaling between the terminal and the network. In a basic rate interface,
the D-channel operates at 16 Kb per second. In a primary rate interface,
the D-channel operates at 64 Kb per second.
- destination point code (DPC)
- A code that identifies the signaling point to which an MTP signal
unit is to be sent. Unique in a particular network.
- development system
- A Blueworx Voice Response system
that is not used to respond to, or make, “live” calls; it is used
only to develop and test applications. Contrast with production system.
- dial
- To start a telephone call. In telecommunication, this action is
performed to make a connection between a terminal and a telecommunication
device over a switched line.
- dial by name
- To press the keys that are related to subscribers' names
instead of to their telephone numbers or extensions.
- dialed number identification service (DNIS)
- A number that is supplied by the public telephone network to identify
a logical called party. For example, two toll-free numbers might both
be translated to a single real number. The DNIS information distinguishes
which of the two toll-free numbers was dialed.
- dialog box
- A secondary window that presents information or requests data
for a selected action.
- dial tone
- An audible signal (call progress tone) that indicates that a device
such as a PABX or central office switch is ready to accept address
information (DTMF or dial pulses).
- DID
- See direct inward dialing.
- digital signal processing (DSP)
- A set of algorithms and procedures that processes electronic signals
after their conversion to digital format. Because of the specific
mathematical models that are required to perform this processing,
specialized processors are generally used.
- Digital Subscriber signaling System Number 1 (DSS1)
- A signaling protocol that is used between ISDN subscriber equipment
and the network. It is carried on the ISDN D-channel. ITU-T recommendations
Q.920 to Q.940 describe this protocol.
- Digital Trunk Ethernet Adapter (DTEA)
- A Radysis adapter card that provides the audio streaming (RTP)
interface between the Blueworx Voice Response internal
H.100 bus and Ethernet for a maximum of 120 channels using uncompressed
(G.711) voice, and compressed G.723.2 and G.729A compressed voice.
- Digital Trunk No Adapter (DTNA)
- A device driver that supports uncompressed (G.711)
voice RTP streaming.
- Digital Trunk Telephony Adapter (DTTA)
- The IBM Quad Digital Trunk Telephony PCI Adapter.
In Blueworx Voice Response,
this adapter is known as a DTTA. It allows you to connect directly
to the telephony network from a pSeries computer without the need
for an external pack.
- Digital Trunk Telephony Adapter (DTTA) with Blind Swap Cassette
(BSC)
- The IBM Quad Digital Trunk Telephony PCI Adapter. In Blueworx Voice Response, this
adapter is known as a DTTA. It allows you to connect directly to the
telephony network from a pSeries computer without the need for an
external pack. This DTTA includes a short Blind Swap Cassette (BSC)
which is required for installing the DTTA in machines that use the
BSC (for example, the pSeries 650–6M2).
- diphone
- A transitional phase from one sound to the next that is used as
a building block for speech synthesis. Typically, between one thousand
and two thousand diphones exist in any national language.
- direct dial in (DDI)
- See direct inward dialing.
- direct inward dialing (DID)
- A service that allows outside parties to call directly to an extension
of a PABX. Known in Europe as direct dial in (DDI).
- direct speech recognition
- Identification of words from spoken input that are read directly
from the telephony channel. Contrast with indirect speech recognition.
- DirectTalk bean
- One of the beans that is provided with Blueworx Voice Response. It provides
access from a voice application to simple call control functions:
waiting for a call, making an outgoing call, handing a call over to
another application, and returning a call when finished.
- discrete word recognition
- Identification of spoken words that are separated by periods of
silence, or input one at a time. Contrast with continuous speech recognition.
- disconnect
- To hang up or terminate a call.
- Distributed Voice Technologies (DVT)
- A component of Blueworx Voice Response that
provides an interface to allow you to integrate your own voice technology
(such as a speech recognizer) with your Blueworx Voice Response system.
- distribution list
- In voice mail, a list of subscribers to whom the same message
can be sent.
- DMS100
- (1) A Northern Telecom switch. (2) The custom ISDN protocol that
is run on the DMS100 switch, providing 23 B-channels and a D-channel
over a T1 trunk.
- DNIS
- See dialed number identification
service.
- double-trunking
- See trombone.
- down
- The condition in which a device is unusable as a result of an
internal fault or of an external condition, such as loss of power.
- downstream physical unit (DSPU)
- Any remote physical unit (data link, storage, or input/output
device) that is attached to a single network host system.
- DPC
- See destination point code.
- drop-in grammar
- A set of precompiled grammar rules that can be used by an application-specific
grammar to improve the recognition performance.
- DSP
- See digital signal processing.
- DSPU
- See downstream physical unit.
- DSS1
- See Digital Subscriber signaling
System Number 1.
- DTMF
- See dual-tone multifrequency.
- DTEA
- See Digital Trunk Ethernet Adapter.
- DTNA
- See Digital Trunk No Adapter.
- DTTA
- See Digital Trunk Telephony
Adapter.
- dtuser
- The name of the AIX account that is set up during the installation
process for the use of all users of Blueworx Voice Response.
- dual-line call transfer
- A call transfer method in which the primary and secondary lines
remain bridged until a call is completed. (Also known as tromboning:
see trombone).
- dual-tone multifrequency (DTMF)
- The signals are sent when one of the telephone keys is pressed.
Each signal is composed of two different tones.
- DVT
- See Distributed Voice Technologies.
- DVT bridge
- The interface between a voice technology component (such as a
speech recognizer) and the DVT server. A bridge must exist for each
technology that you want to integrate with DVT.
- DVT_Client2
- A Blueworx Voice Response custom
server that passes commands and data to DVT_Server.
- DVT interface
- A Blueworx Voice Response programming
interface that is used by a DVT bridge. It enables integration of
voice applications with Distributed
Voice Technologies to provide functions such as speech
recognition.
- DVT_Server
- A component of DVT that allocates and manages system resources
in response to requests from DVT_Client2.
- DVT service
- The combination of a voice application, a DVT bridge, and a voice
technology that allows a caller to interact with your business.
- dynamic vocabulary
- A vocabulary that is defined while an application is running.
E
- E&M
- A channel-associated signaling protocol in which signaling is
done using two leads: an M-lead that transmits battery or ground and
an E-lead that receives open or ground.
- E1
- A digital trunking facility standard that is used in Europe and
elsewhere. It can transmit and receive 30 digitized voice or data
channels. Two additional channels are used for synchronization, framing,
and signaling. The transmission rate is 2048 Kb per second. Contrast
with T1.
- echo cancelation
- A filter algorithm that compares a copy of the voice data that
is being sent to a caller, with the voice data being that is received
from the caller. Any echo of the sent data is removed before the received
data is sent on, for example, to a speech recognizer.
- edge
- See result.
- EDL
- See exchange data link.
- emulation
- The imitation of all or part of one computer system by another,
so that the imitating system accepts the same data, runs the same
programs, and gets the same results as the imitated computer system
does.
- endpoint
- In Voice over Internet Protocol,
a place where calls are originated and ended.
- engine
- A speech recognition process that accepts voice data as input
and returns the text of what was said as output. It is the process
that performs the recognition.
- engine type
- Each engine must be configured with a specific type. The type
is a textual tag that is associated with a specific engine and does
not change the operation or functionality of the engine.
- error message
- Any message that is displayed by Blueworx Voice Response in the
System Monitor as an alarm and
optionally written to the Blueworx Voice Response error
log, or to the AIX error log (as an alert).
Strictly, the term error message should
include only red (immediate attention) and yellow (problem situation)
messages, but it is also used to refer to green (a red or yellow message
has been cleared) and white (informational) messages.
- Ethernet
- A 10/100 network connection between the VoIP gateway and the Speech
Server that supports VoIP.
- ETS
- European Telecommunications Standard or European Telecommunication
Specification.
- ETSI
- European Telecommunications Standards Institute.
- Euro-ISDN
- The common European ISDN standard, agreed in 1993, that provides
a basic range of services and supplementary services using 30 B-channels
plus a D-channel over an E1 trunk.
- exchange data link
- A serial connection that carries messaging information between Blueworx Voice Response and the
Lucent Technologies 1AESS, Northern Telecom DMS100, Ericsson MD110
switch, or Siemens Hicom 300.
- exit
- A point in a supplied application from which control can be passed
to another custom-written application. On completion, the custom-written
application passes control back to the supplied application.
F
- fade in
- To gradually increase the volume of sounds, such as background
music.
- fade out
- To gradually decrease the volume of sounds, such as background
music.
- failover
- A transparent operation that, in the event of a system failure,
switches responsibility for managing resources to a redundant or standby
system. Also known as fallover.
- FDM
- See Feature Download Management.
- Feature Download Management (FDM)
- An ADSI protocol that enables several alternative key and screen
overlays to be stored in an ADSI telephone, and to be selected by
predetermined events at the telephone.
- Federal Communication Commission (FCC)
- The standard body in the United States that is responsible for
communication.
- field
- An identifiable area in a window that is used to enter or display
data.
- FILELIST
- A WebSphere Voice Server Telephony runtime file that defines which
files to load into a WebSphere Voice Server engine. It contains a
list in the form:
context type grammar filename
… …
Recursion
is not permitted; that is, no contexts of type FILELIST can be specified
in a FILELIST. When a FILELIST is loaded, all the grammars that are
specified in it are loaded into the engine. From then on, the grammars
that are loaded when the FILELIST is specified are regarded as a single
context.
- Foreign Exchange Subscriber (FXS)
- A signaling protocol that links a user's location to a remote
exchange that would not normally be serving that user, to provide,
for example, calls to outside the local area at the local rate.
- frame
- A group of data bits that is surrounded by a beginning sequence
and an ending sequence.
- fsg
- Abbreviation for finite state grammar. In WebSphere Voice Server,
the extension of a file that contains grammar specifications in compiled,
binary form. It is generated from a .bnf file and
is called a .fsg file.
- function
- In ADSI, an ADSI instruction or group of instructions.
- FXS
- See Foreign Exchange Subscriber.
G
- gatekeeper
- A component of a Voice over Internet
Protocol that provides services such as admission to the
network and address translation.
- gateway
- A component of Voice over Internet
Protocolthat provides a bridge between VoIP and circuit-switched
environments.
- G.711
- Specification for uncompressed voice for PSTN and Voice over Internet Protocol access.
- G.723.1
- Compressed audio codecs that are used on Voice over Internet Protocol connection
for voice.
- G.729A
- Compressed audio codecs that are used on Voice over Internet Protocol connection
for voice.
- glare
- A condition that occurs when both ends of a telephone line or
trunk are seized at the same time.
- grammar
- A structured collection of words and phrases that are bound together
by rules. A grammar defines the set of all words, phrases, and sentences
that might be spoken by a caller and are recognized by the engine.
A grammar differs from a vocabulary in
that it provides rules that govern the sequence in which words and
phrases can be joined together.
- greeting
- In voice mail, the recording that is heard by a caller on reaching subscriber's mailbox. See
also announcement-only greeting.
Contrast with voice message.
- greeting header
- In voice mail, a recording that is made by a subscriber and played
to callers either before
or instead of a personal greeting.
- Groupe Special Mobile (GSM)
- A CEPT/CCH standard for mobile telephony.
H
- HACMP (High-Availability Cluster Multi-Processing) for AIX
- Licensed Program Product (LPP) that provides custom software that
recognizes changes in a cluster and coordinates the use of AIX features
to create a highly-available environment for critical data and applications.
- HACMP/ES
- Licensed Program Product (LPP) that provides Enhanced Scalability
to the HACMP for AIX LPP. An HACMP/ES cluster can include up to 32
nodes.
- hang up
- To end a call. See also disconnect.
- HDB3
- High-density bipolar of order 3. An E1 line coding method in which
each block of four successive zeros is replaced by 000V or B00V, so
that the number of B pulses between consecutive V pulses is odd. Therefore,
successive V pulses are of alternate polarity so that no dc component
is introduced. Note: B represents an inserted pulse that observes
the alternate mark inversion (AMI) rule
and V represents an AMI violation. HDB3 is similar to B8ZS that is
used with T1.
- HDLC
- See high-level data link control.
- high-level data link control
- An X.25 protocol.
- homologation
- The process of getting a telephony product approved and certified
by a country's telecommunications authority.
- hook flash
- A signal that is sent to a switch to request a switch feature
(such as call transfer).
- host application
- An application residing on the host computer.
- hunt group
- A set of telephone lines from which a non-busy line is found to
handle, for example, an incoming call.
I
- immediate start
- A procedure that is used with some channel-associated signaling
protocols, when the address signaling is sent within 65 milliseconds
of going off-hook. Contrast with delay
start and wink start.
- IN
- See intelligent network.
- in-band
- In the telephony voice channel, signals are said to be carried
in-band. Contrast with out-of-band.
- indirect speech recognition
- Identification of words from spoken input that are read from a
file. Contrast with direct speech
recognition.
- initialize
- To prepare a system, device, or program for operation; for example,
to initialize a diskette.
- input parameter
- Data that is received by a program such as a prompt, 3270 script,
custom server, or state table from the program that called it. Contrast
with local variable and system variable.
- integrated messaging
- A messaging system in which more than one copy of a single message
is stored, the copies being kept synchronized by the applications
that are used to access them. Contrast with unified messaging.
- Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
- A digital end-to-end telecommunication network that supports multiple
services including, but not limited to, voice and data.
- Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) call transfer
- In Blueworx Voice Response,
an application that allows you to transfer calls on Nortel DMS-100
switches using Integrated Services
Digital Network (ISDN) two B-channel transfer, and on Nortel
DMS-100 and DMS-250 switches using Nortel's proprietary Release
Link Trunk (RLT) call transfer protocol.
- Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) two B-channel transfer
- A call transfer feature that is defined by Bellcore GR-2865-CORE
specification, and used on Nortel and Lucent switches.
- Integrated Services Digital Network user part (ISUP)
- Part of the SS7 protocol that supports telephony signaling applications.
The ISDN user part is defined to carry signaling information that
relates to digital telephones, terminals, and PABXs in customer premises.
- intelligent network (IN)
- A telephone network that includes programmable software that is
not resident on the switch. It allows the service provider to provide
special services, such as special call-handling, that are not dependent
on the capabilities of the switch. See also advanced intelligent network.
- intelligent peripheral (IP)
- A voice processing system (such as Blueworx Voice Response) that
provides enhanced services such as voice response, speech recognition,
text-to-speech, voice messaging, and database access in an advanced intelligent network.
- interactive voice response (IVR)
- A computer application that communicates information and interacts
with the caller via the telephone voice channel.
- International Telecommunications Union – Telecommunication Standardization
Sector (ITU-T)
- The name of the organization that was previously known as the
CCITT.
- IP
- See intelligent peripheral.
- ISDN
- See Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) .
- ISDN two B-channel transfer
- See Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) two B-channel transfer.
- ISDN-UP
- See Integrated Services Digital
Network user part.
- ISUP
- See Integrated Services Digital
Network user part.
- ITU-T
- See International Telecommunications
Union – Telecommunication Standardization Sector.
- IVR
- See interactive voice response.
K
- key
- (1) One of the pushbuttons on the telephone handset; sometimes
referred to as a DTMF key.
(2) A component of the keyboard that is attached to the computer system.
- key pad
- The part of the telephone that contains the pushbutton keys.
- key pad mapping
- The process of assigning special alphanumeric characters to the
keys that are on a telephone key pad, so that the telephone can be
used as a computer-terminal keyboard.
L
- LAN
- See local area network.
- language model
- For speech recognition, a set of acoustic shapes (in binary format)
for a given set of words, in which word-to-word differences are maximized,
but speaker-to-speaker differences are minimized. See also vocabulary.
- LAPD
- See link access protocol for
the D-channel.
- licensed program product (LPP)
- A separately-priced program and its associated materials that
bear an IBM copyright and are offered under the terms and conditions
of a licensing agreement.
- license server
- A machine on a network that holds licenses and distributes them
on request to other machines on the network.
- line error
- An error on the telephone line that causes the signal to be impaired.
- link access protocol for the D-channel
- An HDLC protocol used in ISDN that ensures a reliable connection
between the network and the user. Often used as another name for Q.921.
- local area network (LAN)
- A network in which computers are connected to one another in a
limited geographical area. Blueworx Voice Response communication
with WebSphere Voice Server speech recognition, text-to-speech, and
single system image (SSI) requires a LAN that is dedicated to that
purpose (unless both are installed on the same system). A token-ring network is a type of
LAN.
- local variable
- A user-defined temporary variable that can be accessed only by
the program (state table, prompt, or 3270 script) for which it is
defined. Contrast with input parameter, system variable.
M
- macro
- See system prompt.
- MAP
- See mobile application part.
- MB
- See megabyte.
- megabyte
- (1) For processor storage and real and virtual memory, 1 048 576
bytes. (2) For disk storage capacity and transmission rates, 1 000
000 bytes.
- Message Center
- See Unified Messaging
- message delivery preference
- The subscriber's choice of whether voice mail is stored as
voice mail only, as e-mail only, or as both voice mail and e-mail.
- message delivery type
- The format in which a voice message is delivered.
- message signal unit (MSU)
- An MTP packet that contains data.
- message transfer part (MTP)
- Part of the SS7 protocol that is normally used to provide a connectionless
service that is roughly similar to levels one through three of the
OSI reference model.
- message waiting indicator (MWI)
- A visible or audible indication (such as a light or a stutter
tone) that a voice message is waiting to be retrieved.
- MFR1
- An in-band address signaling system that uses six tone frequencies,
two at a time. MFR1 is used principally in North America and is described
in ITU-T recommendations Q.310 through Q.332.
- MIME
- See multipurpose Internet mail
extensions.
- mobile application part (MAP)
- Optional layer 7 application for SS7 that runs on top of TCAP
for use with mobile network applications.
- MP
- See multiprocessor.
- MSU
- See message signal unit.
- MTP
- See message transfer part.
- mu(μ)-law
- The companding algorithm that is used primarily in North America
and Japan when converting from analog to digital speech data. (Compand
is a contraction of compress and expand.) Contrast with A-law.
- multiprocessor (MP)
- A computer that includes two or more processing units that can
access a common main storage.
- multipurpose Internet mail extensions (MIME)
- A protocol that is used on Internet for extending e-mail capability
and merging it with other forms of communication, such as voice mail
and fax.
- mumble
- Non speech noise that a user interjects while speaking.
- music channel
- A channel on which sounds can be broadcast to one or more telephony
(voice) channels.
- music title
- The name by which Blueworx Voice Response knows
a tune.
- MWI
- See message waiting indicator.
N
- National ISDN
- A common ISDN standard that was developed for use in the U.S.
- NAU
- See network addressable unit.
- N-Best
- The ability to return more than one speech recognition result.
Typically, an array of results is available in the application in
sequence of descending probability.
- NCP
- See network control program.
- NET
- Norme Européenne de Télécommunication.
- Net 5
- The test specification for conformance to the Euro-ISDN standard
for primary rate access to ISDN.
- network addressable unit (NAU)
- Any network component that can be addressed separately by other
members of the network.
- network control program (NCP)
- Used for requests and responses that are exchanged between physical
units in a network for data flow control.
- Network File System (NFS)
- A protocol, developed by Sun Microsystems, Incorporated, that
allows any host in a network to gain access to another host or netgroup
and their file directories. In a single system image (SSI), NFS is
used to attach the Blueworx Voice Response DB2 database.
- network termination
- See NT mode.
- NFAS
- See non-facility associated signaling.
- NFS
- See Network File System.
- node
- In a single system image (SSI), one of the Blueworx Voice Response systems
that are in the cluster.
- non-facility associated signaling (NFAS)
- An ISDN configuration where several T1 facilities can be controlled
by a single D-channel, instead of the normal T1 configuration where
each T1 facility has 23 B-channels and a D-channel (23B+D). With NFAS,
all 24 timeslots of the non signaling trunks are available for voice,
whereas only 23 channels can be used on the trunk that carries signaling
traffic (23B+D+n24B).
- NT mode
- Attachment to the ISDN network is asymmetric. The network side
of the connection operates in network termination, or NT, mode. User
equipment operates in terminal equipment, or TE, mode.
O
- ODM
- See Object Data Manager.
- Object Data Manager (ODM)
- A data manager intended for the storage of system data. The ODM
is used for many system management functions. Information that is
used in many commands and SMIT functions is stored and maintained
in the ODM as objects with associated characteristics.
- off-hook
- A telephone line state, usually induced by lifting a receiver,
in which the line is ready to make a call.
- offline
- Not attached or known to the existing system configuration, and
therefore not in active operation.
- on-hook
- A telephone line state, usually induced by hanging up a receiver,
in which the line is ready to receive a call.
- online
- In active operation.
- OPC
- See originating point code.
- Open Systems Interconnection (OSI)
- (1.) The interconnection of open systems as specified in particular
ISO standards. (2.) The use of standardized procedures to enable the
interconnection of data processing systems.
- Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) architecture
- Network architecture that observes the particular set of ISO standards
that relate to Open Systems Interconnection.
- Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Reference Model
- A conceptual model composed of seven layers, each specifying particular
network functions. Developed by the International Organization for
Standardization (ISO) in 1984, it is considered to be the primary
architectural model for intercomputer communications
- originating point code (OPC)
- A code that identifies the signaling Point that originated an
MTP signal unit. Unique in a particular network.
- OSI
- See Open Systems Interconnection.
- outgoing mail
- In voice mail, messages that are sent by a subscriber to another
subscriber on the same system, and have not yet been listened to by
the addressee.
- out-of-band
- In the telephony signaling channel, as opposed to the voice channel.
Signals are said to be carried out-of-band. Contrast with in-band.
P
- PABX
- See private automatic branch
exchange .
- pack
- Each DTTA contains the equivalent of four packs.
The pack is a digital trunk processor built into the digital trunk
adapter, so there is no need for external hardware. See also TPACK.
- parameter file
- An ASCII file that sets configuration
parameters.
- password
- A unique string of characters that is known to a computer system
and to a user. The user must specify the character string to gain
access to the system and to the information that is stored in it.
- PBX
- See private branch exchange.
- PCI
- See peripheral component interconnect.
- PCM
- See Pulse Code Modulation.
- PCM fault condition
- A fault, such as power supply failure, or loss of incoming signal,
in T1 or E1 equipment. (ITU-T G.732 and G.733.)
- peripheral component interconnect (PCI)
- A computer busing architecture that defines electrical and physical
standards for electronic interconnection.
- personal greeting
- In voice mail, a greeting that
is recorded by a subscriber.
Contrast with system greeting.
- phone recognition
- Communicating with a computer using voice via a telephone, over
a telephone line. The computer application recognizes what was said
and takes suitable action.
- port
- In time-slot management, one end of a 64 Kbps unidirectional stream
that can be attached to the TDM bus.
- port set
- In time-slot management, a collection of ports that can be connected
using a single CA_TDM_Connect() API call to a complementary collection
of ports.
- PRA
- Primary rate access (PRA). Used as another name for primary rate
interface (PRI).
- PRI
- See primary rate interface.
- primary rate access (PRA)
- See primary rate interface.
- primary rate interface (PRI)
- The means of ISDN access that is normally used by large sites.
It provides 30 (E1) or 23 (T1) B-channels of 64 Kb per second and
one D-channel for signaling. This is often known as 30B+D or 23B+D.
Contrast with basic rate interface.
- primary rate ISDN (PRI)
- See primary rate interface.
- primitive
- A message that is sent from one process to another.
- private automatic branch exchange (PABX)
- An automatic private switching system that services an organization
and is usually located on a customer's premises. Often used as
another name for private branch exchange
(PBX) .
- private branch exchange (PBX)
- A switch inside a private business that concentrates the number
of inside lines into a smaller number of outside lines (trunks). Many
PBXs also provide advanced voice and data communication features.
Often used as another name for private
automatic branch exchange .
- process a call
- To answer the telephone and perform the correct tasks.
- Process Manager
- In WebSphere Voice Server, the process that manages the interaction
of all telephony system processes; for example, starting and stopping
text-to-speech or speech recognition sessions.
- production system
- A Blueworx Voice Response system
that responds to or makes “live” calls. A production system can also
be used to develop new applications. Contrast with development system.
- program temporary fix (PTF)
- An update to IBM software.
- program data
- Application-specific data that can be associated with a call transfer
from CallPath to Blueworx Voice Response, or in
the opposite direction. This is equivalent to CallPath program
data, but Blueworx Voice Response imposes
the restriction that the data must be a printable ASCII character
string, with a maximum length of 512 bytes.
- prompt
- (1) A message that requests input or provides information. Prompts
are seen on the computer display screen and heard over the telephone.
(2) In Blueworx Voice Response,
a program that uses logic to determine dynamically the voice segments
that are to be played as a voice prompt.
- prompt directory
- A list of all the prompts that are used in a particular voice
application. Used by the state table to play the requested voice prompts.
- pronunciation
- The possible phonetic representations of a word. A word can have
multiple pronunciations; for example, “the” has at least two pronunciations,
“thee” and “thuh”.
- pronunciation dictionary
- A file that contains the phonetic representation of all of the
words, phrases, and sentences for an application grammar.
- pronunciation pool
- A WebSphere Voice Server resource that contains the set of all
pronunciations.
- protocol
- A set of semantic and syntactic rules that determines the behavior
of functional units when they get communication. Examples of Blueworx Voice Response protocols
are FXS, RE, and R2.
- PSTN
- An ITU-T abbreviation for public switched telephone network.
- PTF
- See program temporary fix.
- Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)
- Variation of a digital signal to represent information.
- pushbutton
- (1) A key that is on a telephone key pad. (2) A component in a
window that allows the user to start a specific action.
- pushbutton telephone
- A type of telephone that has pushbuttons. It might or might not
send tone signals. If it does, each number and symbol on the key pad
has its own specific tone.
Q
- Q.921
- The ITU-T (formerly CCITT) recommendation that defines the link
layer of the DSS1 protocol. Q.921 defines an HDLC protocol that ensures
a reliable connection between the network and the user. Often used
as another name for LAPD.
- Q.931
- The ITU-T recommendation that defines the network layer of the
DSS1 protocol. This layer carries the ISDN messages that control the
making and clearing of calls.
- quiesce
- To shut down a channel, a trunk line, or the whole system after
allowing normal completion of any active operations. The shutdown
is performed channel-by-channel. Channels that are in an idle state
are shut down immediately. Channels that are processing calls are
shut down at call completion.
R
- RAI
- See remote alarm indication.
- RBS
- See robbed-bit signaling.
- RE
- See remote extension.
- Recognition Engine server
- In WebSphere Voice Server, the software that performs the speech
recognition and sends the results to the client. This consists of
one ‘Tsm router' and at least one ‘tsmp' and one ‘engine'.
- reduced instruction set computer (RISC)
- A computer that uses a small, simplified set of frequently-used
instructions to improve processing speed.
- referral number
- The phone number to which calls are routed, when call forwarding
is active.
- rejection
- The identification of an utterance as one that is not allowed
by a grammar.
- release link trunk (RLT)
- A custom specification from Nortel for ISDN call transfer.
- remote alarm indication (RAI)
- A remote alarm (also referred to as a yellow alarm) indicates
that the far-end of a T1 connection has lost frame synchronization.
The Send RAI system parameter can be set to prevent Blueworx Voice Response from
sending RAI.
- remote extension (RE)
- An E1 signaling protocol that is similar to FXS loop start.
- resource element
- A component of an Intelligent Network. The resource element contains
specialized resources such as speech recognizers or text-to-speech
converters.
- response
- In speech recognition, the character string that is returned by
the recognizer, through DVT_Client, to the state table. The string
represents the result of a recognition attempt. This is the word or
words that the recognizer considers to be the best match with the
speech input.
- result
- An indicator of the success or failure of a state table action.
It is returned by Blueworx Voice Response to the
state table. Also known as an edge.
- result state
- The state that follows each of the possible results of an action.
- return code
- A code that indicates the status of an application action when
it completes.
- RISC
- See reduced instruction set computer.
- RLT
- See release link trunk.
- robbed-bit signaling (RBS)
- The T1 channel -associated signaling scheme that uses the least
significant bit (bit 8) of each information channel byte for signaling
every sixth frame. This is known as 7-5/6-bit coding rather than 8-bit
coding. The signaling bit in each channel is associated only with
the channel in which it is contained.
S
- SAP
- See service access point.
- SAS
- A T1 signaling protocol that is similar to FXS.
- SCbus
- See Signal Computing bus.
- SCCP
- See signaling connection control
part.
- SCP
- See service control point.
- screened transfer
- A type of call transfer in which the transfer of the held party
to the third party is completed only if the third party answers the
call. Contrast with blind transfer.
- script
- The logical flow of actions for a 3270 server program.
- script language
- A high-level, application-specific scripting language, which consists
of statements that are used to develop 3270 scripts. These scripts
are part of the interface between a state table and a 3270-based host
business application.
- SCSA
- See Signal Computing System Architecture.
- SDC
- See Server Display Control.
- SDLC
- See Synchronous Data Link Control.
- segment ID number
- One or more numbers that are used to identify a voice or prompt
segment.
- Server Display Control (SDC)
- An ADSI control mode in which the ADSI telephone is controlled
through a dialog with a voice response system.
- server node
- In a single system image (SSI), a Blueworx Voice Response system
that contains either the Blueworx Voice Response DB2 database,
or the voice data, or both.
- service access point (SAP)
- An OSI term for the port through which a service user (layer N+1)
accesses the services of a service provider (layer N).
- service control point (SCP)
- A component of the intelligent network that provides transactional
services, such as translation of toll-free numbers to subscriber numbers.
- service information octet (SIO)
- A field that is in an MTP message signal unit. It identifies a
higher layer user of MTP, and whether the message relates to a national
or international network.
- service node
- An element of an Intelligent Network. The service node contains
the service logic that controls an intelligent network application
and resources.
- service provider
- Any company that provides services for a fee to its customers,
such as telecommunication companies, application service providers,
enterprise IT, and Internet service providers.
- service provider equipment (SPE)
- The switching equipment that is owned by the telephone company.
- session
- See speech recognition session.
- Session Initiation Protocol
- A signaling protocol used for internet conferencing, telephony,
presence, events notification and instant messaging.
- short message service center (SMSC)
- A component of the mobile telephony network, specified by the
GSM group of standards, that provides for exchange of alphanumeric
messages of less than 160 bytes. Messages can be exchanged between
different types of system such as mobile telephone, alphanumeric pager,
terminal, e-mail, telex, or DTMF telephone.
- SIF
- See signaling information field.
- Signal Computing System Architecture (SCSA)
- An architecture that was defined by Dialogic to support interoperability
of software and hardware components that are developed by different
vendors in the computer telephony industry.
- Signal Computing bus (SCbus)
- A time division multiplexed (TDM) hardware bus that was originated
by Dialogic to interconnect different vendors' computer telephony
adapters. Specified as part of Signal
Computing System Architecture (SCSA).
- signaling
- The exchange of control information between functional parts of
the system in a telecommunications network.
- signaling connection control part (SCCP)
- A layer 3 protocol that observes OSI.
- signaling information field (SIF)
- The user data portion of an MTP message signal unit.
- signaling link code (SLC)
- A code that identifies a particular signaling link that connects
the destination and originating signaling points. This is used in
MTP signaling network management messages to indicate the signaling
link to which the message relates.
- signaling link selection (SLS)
- A field that is used to distribute MTP signal units across multiple
signaling links.
- signaling mode
- The type of signaling protocol, either channel-associated signaling,
or common-channel signaling.
- signaling point
- A node in a signaling network that either originates and receives
signaling messages, or transfers signaling messages from one signaling
link to another, or both.
- signaling process
- A Blueworx Voice Response component
that controls signaling for an exchange data link or common-channel
signaling protocol. Some signaling processes are supplied with Blueworx Voice Response, and
others can be custom-written.
- signaling System Number 7 (SS7)
- The international high-speed signaling backbone used for the public-switched
telephone network.
- silence
- A short pause between utterances.
- simple mail transfer protocol (SMTP)
- An Ethernet protocol that is related to TCP/IP.
- simple network management protocol (SNMP)
- In the Internet suite of protocols, a network management protocol
that is used to monitor routers and attached networks. SNMP is an
application layer protocol. Information on devices managed is defined
and stored in the application's Management Information Base (MIB).
SNMP provides a means of monitoring Blueworx Voice Response resources
remotely.
- Simplified Message Desk Interface (SMDI)
- A Northern Telecom service that transmits out-of-band information
between Blueworx Voice Response and
particular switches.
- Simplified Message Service Interface (SMSI)
- A Lucent Technologies service that transmits out-of-band information
between Blueworx Voice Response and
particular switches.
- single system image (SSI)
- A cluster of Blueworx Voice Response systems
that are connected together using a local
area network. Each system (known as a node) in the cluster
is configured as either a client or a server. A single system image
typically consists of one server node and multiple client nodes. The
client nodes retrieve applications and voice data from the server.
A second server can be configured for redundancy.
- sink
- A port that takes voice data from the TDM bus. Contrast with source.
- SIO
- See service information octet.
- SIP
- See Session Initiation Protocol.
- SLC
- See signaling link code.
- SLS
- See signaling link selection.
- SMDI
- See Simplified Message Desk Interface.
- SMIT
- See System Management Interface
Tool.
- SMP
- See symmetric multiprocessor.
- SMSC
- See short message service center.
- SMSI
- See Simplified Message Service
Interface.
- SMTP
- See simple mail transfer protocol.
- SNA
- Systems Network Architecture.
- SNMP
- See simple network management
protocol .
- source
- A port that puts voice data on to the TDM bus. Contrast with sink.
- SPACK
- A logical component that consists of a base card, which connects
to the digital trunk adapter in the pSeries computer, and
a trunk interface card (TIC), which manages the trunk connection to
the switch. Contrast with VPACK and TPACK.
- SPE
- See service provider equipment.
- speaker-dependent speech recognition
- Identification of spoken words that is related to knowledge of
the speech characteristics of one speaker. Contrast with speaker-independent speech recognition.
- speaker-independent speech recognition
- Identification of spoken words that is related to collected knowledge
of the speech characteristics of a population of speakers. Contrast
with speaker-dependent speech recognition.
- special character
- A character that is not alphabetic, numeric, or blank. For example,
a comma (,) or an asterisk (*).
- speech recognition
- The process of identifying spoken words. See discrete word recognition, continuous speech recognition, speaker-dependent speech recognition, speaker-independent speech recognition.
- Speech Recognition Control Language (SRCL)
- In WebSphere Voice Server, a structured syntax and notation that
defines speech grammars, annotations, repetitions, words, phrases,
and associated rules.
- speech recognition session
- In WebSphere Voice Server, a sequence of recognition commands
that allocate a recognition engine, and return a unique identifier
to identify the engine.
- speech synthesis
- The creation of an approximation to human speech by a computer
that concatenates basic speech parts together. See also text-to-speech.
- SRCL
- See Speech Recognition Control
Language (SRCL).
- SS7
- See signaling System Number 7.
- SSI
- See single system image.
- SSI-compliant custom server
- A custom server that runs correctly in a single system image.
The custom server observes all the guidelines for the operation of
custom servers in an SSI environment.
- SSI-tolerant custom server
- A custom server that runs in a single system image, but with only
some restrictions.
- standalone system
- A Blueworx Voice Response system
that is not part of a single system image (SSI). A standalone system
is not connected to other Blueworx Voice Response systems,
so it contains its own application and voice data.
- state
- One step in the logical sequence of actions that makes a Blueworx Voice Response voice
application.
- state table
- A list of all the actions that are used in a particular voice
application. A component of Blueworx Voice Response.
- state table action
- One instruction in a set of instructions that is in a Blueworx Voice Response state
table that controls how Blueworx Voice Response processes
various operations such as playing voice prompts or recording voice
messages. See also state.
- stub
- A line in a state table that is only partially displayed.
- subscriber
- In voice mail, any person who owns a mailbox.
- subscriber class
- A named set of variables that defines a specific level of service
available to telephone subscribers, such as maximum number of messages
per mailbox and maximum number of members per mailbox distribution
list.
- subvocabulary
- A vocabulary that is called by another vocabulary.
- supplementary service
- In Euro-ISDN, a service outside the minimum service offering that
each signatory is obliged to provide. For example, calling line identification presentation (CLIP) and call session.
- switch
- A generic term that describes a telecommunications system that
provides connections between telephone lines and trunks.
- symmetric multiprocessor (SMP)
- A system in which functionally-identical multiple processors are
used in parallel, providing simple and efficient load-balancing.
- Synchronous Data Link Control (SDLC)
- A discipline for managing synchronous, code-transparent, serial-by-bit
information transfer over a link connection. Transmission exchanges
can be duplex or half-duplex over switched or nonswitched links.
- system administrator
- The person who controls and manages the Blueworx Voice Response system
by adding users, assigning account numbers, and changing authorizations.
- system greeting
- In voice mail, a default greeting that
is heard by callers to the mailboxes of subscribers who have not recorded
a personal greeting or who have selected the system greeting. Contrast
with personal greeting.
- System Management Interface Tool (SMIT)
- A set of utilities that can be used for various purposes, such
as loading Blueworx Voice Response software,
installing the exchange data link, and configuring SNA.
- Systems Network Architecture (SNA)
- An architecture that describes the logical structure, formats,
protocols, and operational sequences for transmitting information
units through the networks and also the operational sequences for
controlling the configuration and operation of networks.
- system parameter
- A variable that controls
some of the behavior of Blueworx Voice Response or applications
that are running under Blueworx Voice Response. System
parameters are set through System Configuration or Pack Configuration
options on the Configuration menu. Some system parameter values are
assigned to system variables
when an application is initialized. Contrast with input parameter, local variable, system variable.
- system prompt
- The symbol that appears at the command line of an operating system,
indicating that the operating system is ready for the user to enter
a command.
- system variable
- A permanent global variable that is defined by Blueworx Voice Response for use
by state tables. Many system variables are loaded with values when
the state table is initialized. Some values are taken from system
parameters. Contrast with input parameter, local variable, system parameter.
T
- T1
- A digital trunking facility standard that is used in the United
States and elsewhere. It can transmit and receive 24 digitized voice
or data channels. Signaling can be imbedded in the voice channel transmission
when robbed-bit signaling is used. The transmission rate is 1544 kilobits
per second. Contrast with E1.
- T1/D3
- A framing format that is used in T1 transmission.
- T1/D4
- A framing format that is used in T1 transmission.
- tag
- A text string that is attached to any instance of a word in a grammar. A tag can be used (1)
to distinguish two occurrences of the same word in a grammar or (2)
to identify more than one word in a grammar as having the same meaning.
- Tag Image File Format-Fax (TIFF-F)
- A graphic file format that is used to store and exchange scanned
fax images.
- TCAP
- See transaction capabilities
application part.
- TCP/IP
- See Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol.
- TDD
- See Telecommunications Device
for the Deaf.
- TDM
- See time-division multiplex bus.
- technology
- A program, external to Blueworx Voice Response, that
provides processing for functions such as text-to-speech or speech
recognition.
- Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD)
- A telephony device that has a QWERTY keyboard and a small display
and, optionally, a printer.
- telephone input field
- A field type that contains information that is entered by a caller
who is using pushbutton signals. See also field.
- terminal
- (1) A point in a system or communication network at which data
can enter or leave. (2) In data communication, a device, usually equipped
with a keyboard and display device, that can send and receive information.
- termination character
- A character that defines the end of a telephone data entry.
- text-to-speech (TTS)
- The process by which ASCII text data is converted into synthesized
speech. See also speech synthesis.
- TIC
- See trunk interface card.
- time-division multiplex bus (TDM)
- A method of transmitting many channels of data over a smaller
number of physical connections by multiplexing the data into timeslots,
and demultiplexing at the receiving end. In this document, one such
channel can be considered to be a half-duplex unidirectional stream
of 64 Kb per second.
- TIFF-F
- See Tag Image File Format-Fax
- timeslot
- The smallest switchable data unit on a data bus. It consists of
eight consecutive bits of data. One timeslot is similar to a data
path with a bandwidth of 64 Kb per second.
- token
- A particular message or bit pattern that indicates permission
or temporary control to transmit.
- token-ring network
- A local area network that connects devices in a ring topology
and allows unidirectional data transmission between devices by a token-passing
procedure. A device must receive a token before it can transmit data.
- tone
- An audible signal that is sent across a telephone network. Single
(one-frequency) tones, tritones (three sequential tones at different
frequencies), dual tones (two simultaneous tones at different frequencies),
and dual sequential tones exist. Each has a different meaning.
- TPACK
- A digital trunk processor that is implemented using DSP technology
on the digital trunk adapter without the need for external hardware.
One DTTA digital trunk adapter provides up to four TPACKs on a PCI
card.
- transaction
- A specific, related set of tasks in an application that retrieve
information from a file or database. For example, a request for the
account balance or the available credit limit.
- transaction capabilities application part (TCAP)
- Part of the SS7 protocol that provides transactions in the signaling
network. A typical use of TCAP is to verify a card number, for the
credit card calling service.
- transaction messaging
- The ability to associate an item of data, such as a transaction
identifier, with a voice message. The voice message can later be retrieved
by referencing the data value.
- transfer
- See call transfer.
- Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)
- A communication subsystem that is used to create local area and
wide area networks.
- trombone
- A connected voice path that enters an IVR from a switch on one
circuit, then returns to the same switch on a parallel circuit. Two
IVR ports and two circuits are consumed, but in some circumstances
this might be the only way to make a connection between two callers
if the attached switch does not support a Call Transfer function.
Also known as double-trunking.
- trunk
- A telephone connection between two central offices or switching
devices. In Blueworx Voice Response,
a trunk refers to 24 or 30 channels that are carried on the same T1
or E1 digital interface.
- trunk interface card (TIC)
- The component of the pack that manages the trunk connection to
the switch.
- Tsm Router
- In WebSphere Voice Server, a process that controls which engine
processes are in use at any time. Requests for an engine by a WebSphere
Voice Server Client are accepted or rejected depending on whether
an engine that meets the Tsm Client's requirements is available.
- tsmp
- In WebSphere Voice Server, a process that is running on the Recognition
engine server machine that passes messages between an engine and a
Tsm Client. One tsmp exists for every engine.
- TTS
- See text-to-speech.
- tune
- A piece of music or other audio data that is intended to be played
as background music.
U
- underrun
- To run out of audio data to play, causing voice or music to be
audibly broken up or cut off.
- unified messaging
- A messaging system in which a single copy of a message is stored
and accessed by multiple applications (for example, voice mail and
e-mail). Contrast with integrated
messaging.
- Unified Messaging
- An IBM product that uses Blueworx Voice Response's
voice processing capabilities to provide a wide range of voice mail,
fax, and e-mail functions. Previously known as Message Center.
- user
- Someone who uses Blueworx Voice Response as a
system administrator, application developer, or similar. Contrast
with caller.
- utterance
- A spoken word, phrase, or sentence that can be preceded and followed
by silence.
V
- variable
- A system or user-defined element that contains data values that
are used by Blueworx Voice Response voice
applications. See input parameter, local variable, system parameter, system variable.
- VMS
- See Voice Message Service.
- vocabulary
- A list of words with which Blueworx Voice Response matches
input that is spoken by a caller. See also language model.
- voice application
- A Blueworx Voice Response application
that answers or makes calls, plays recorded voice segments to callers,
and responds to the caller's input.
- voice directory
- A list of voice segments
that is identified by a group ID. Voice directories can be referenced
by prompts and state tables. Contrast with voice table.
- voice mail
- The capability to record, play back, distribute, and route voice
messages.
- voice mailbox
- The notional hard disk space where the incoming messages for a
voice mail subscriber are stored.
- voice message
- In voice mail, a recording that is made by a caller for later
retrieval by a subscriber.
- Voice Message Service (VMS)
- An Ericsson service that transmits information between Blueworx Voice Response and particular
switches.
- voice messaging
- The capability to record, play back, distribute, route, and manage
voice recordings of telephone calls through the use of a processor,
without the intervention of agents other than the callers and those
who receive messages.
- voice model
- A file that contains parameters that describe the sounds of the
language that are to be recognized on behalf of an application. In
WebSphere Voice Server, this is a bnf file.
See also grammar.
- Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
- The sending of telephony voice over Internet Protocol (IP) data
connections instead of over existing dedicated voice networks, switching
and transmission equipment. See also gatekeeper and gateway.
- voice port library
- A library that manages a socket connection from the client to
the voice technology. The library uses entry points that are provided
by DVT.
- Voice Protocol for Internet Messaging (VPIM)
- The standard for digital exchange of voice messages between different
voice mail systems, as defined in Internet Request For Comments (RFC)
1911.
- voice response unit (VRU)
- A telephony device that uses prerecorded voice responses to provide
information in response to DTMF or voice input from a telephone caller.
- voice segment
- The spoken words or sounds that make recorded voice prompts. Each
segment in an application is identified by a group ID and a segment
ID and usually includes text.
- voice server node
- In a single system image (SSI), a server node that contains the
voice data. This is usually the same node as the database server node.
- voice table
- A grouping of voice segments
that is used for organizational purposes. Voice tables can be referenced
by prompts, but not by state tables. Contrast with voice directory.
- voice technology
- See technology.
- VoiceXML
- VoiceXtensible Markup Language. An XML-based markup language for
creating distributed voice applications. Refer to the VoiceXML forum
web site at www.voicexml.org
- VoIP
- See Voice over Internet Protocol.
- VPACK
- A component consisting of a base card, which connects to the digital
trunk adapter in the pSeries computer, and
a trunk interface card (TIC), which manages the trunk connection to
the switch. The single digital trunk processor contains one VPACK,
and the multiple digital trunk processor contains slots for up to
five VPACKs. Contrast with SPACK and TPACK.
- VPIM
- See Voice Protocol for Internet
Messaging.
- VRU
- See voice response unit.
W
- World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
- An organization that develops interoperable technologies (specifications,
guidelines, software, and tools) to lead the Web to its full potential.
W3C is a forum for information, commerce, communication, and collective
understanding. Refer to the web site at http://www.w3.org
- Blueworx Voice Response
- A voice processing system, that combines telephone and data communications
networks to use, directly from a telephone, information that is stored
in databases.
- wink start
- A procedure that is used with some channel-associated signaling
protocols to indicate when a switch or PABX is ready to accept address
signaling. After seizure, the switch sends a short off-hook signal
(wink) when it is ready to accept address information. Contrast with delay start and immediate start.
- word spotting
- In speech recognition, the ability to recognize a single word
in a stream of words.
- wrap
- In ADSI, the concatenation of two columns of display data to form
a single column.
Z
- zero code suppression (ZCS)
- A coding method that is used with alternate mark inversion to
prevent sending eight successive zeros. If eight successive zeros
occur, the second-least significant bit (bit 7, with the bits labeled
1 through 8 from the most significant to the least significant) is
changed from a 0 to a 1. AMI with ZCS does not support clear channel
operation.