Glossary
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14
Appendix
Transmission Time
A fax transmission consists of three stages: the machine that sends the fax connects
with the machine receiving it; the fax is then transmitted, after which the sender and
the recipient exchange signals to confirm the end of transmission. The transmission
time described in this guide is not the total time required for the entire send/receive
transaction, but only the time it takes for the machine to transmit the fax document.
TTI
Transmit Terminal Identification. Also called the TX Terminal ID. The TTI is the name
of a person or an organization and the facsimile number of the machine that sends a
document. In addition to the unit name that you register for the machine, you can
create up to 99 sender names that can be used in place of the unit's name when you
send a fax document.
TX
Abbreviation for "Transmission/Sending."
U
UFR II
Ultra Fast Rendering II. A printing algorithm for realizing high-speed rendering. UFR II
enables processing tasks to be executed and divided appropriately between the host
PC and the printer to greatly reduce overall printing time.
Ultra Fine
A resolution mode for sending originals at 16 dots/mm x 15.4 lines/mm (eight times
the standard resolution). If the receiving fax machine does not support this mode, the
original is automatically sent in the Super Fine or Fine mode.
User signature
Adds a digital signature to a private document, based on the registered user
information when logging on using a login service. This prevents unauthorized access
and alterations to the signed document.
W
WebDAV
Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning. Enables users to collaboratively
edit and manage files on remote Web servers. WebDAV features XML data locking
properties, which prevents authors from overwriting each other's changes.
WebDAV server
Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning server. Storing files and folders on a
WebDAV server enables users to share them over the Internet.