| slovo | definícia |  
telephony (mass) | telephony
  - telefonovanie |  
telephony (encz) | telephony,telefonování	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
Telephony (gcide) | Telephony \Te*leph"o*ny\, n.
    The art or process of reproducing sounds at a distance, as
    with the telephone.
    [1913 Webster] |  
telephony (wn) | telephony
     n 1: transmitting speech at a distance [syn: telephone,
          telephony] |  
telephony (foldoc) | telephony
 
     Communication, often two-way, of spoken
    information, by means of electrical signals carried by wires
    or radio waves.  The term was used to indicate transmission of
    the voice, as opposed to telegraphy (done in Morse code
    and usually called "continuous wave" or CW transmission),
    radio teletypewriter (RTTY) transmission (also called FSK for
    "Frequency Shift Keying", the modulation scheme used by such
    machines), and later, facimile.
 
    (1995-03-14)
  |  
  | | podobné slovo | definícia |  
telephony (mass) | telephony
  - telefonovanie |  
radiotelephony (encz) | radiotelephony,	n:		 |  
telephony (encz) | telephony,telefonování	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
Radiotelephony (gcide) | Radiotelephone \Ra`di*o*tel"e*phone\
    (r[=a]`d[i^]*[o^]*t[e^]l"[-e]*f[=o]n), n.
    A wireless telephone, in which the signal is conveyed by
    radio waves. -- Ra`di*o*te*leph"o*ny, n.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl.] |  
Wireless telephony (gcide) | Wireless \Wire"less\, a.
    Having no wire; specif. (Elec.), designating, or pertaining
    to, a method of telegraphy, telephony, or other information
    transmisssion, in which the messages, data, etc., are
    transmitted through space by electric waves; as, a wireless
    message; a wireless network; a wireless keyboard.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]
 
    Wireless telegraphy or Wireless telegraph (Elec.), any
       system of telegraphy employing no connecting wire or wires
       between the transmitting and receiving stations.
 
    Note: Although more or less successful researchers were made
          on the subject by Joseph Henry, Hertz, Oliver Lodge,
          and others, the first commercially successful system
          was that of Guglielmo Marconi, patented in March, 1897.
          Marconi employed electric waves of high frequency set
          up by an induction coil in an oscillator, these waves
          being launched into space through a lofty antenna. The
          receiving apparatus consisted of another antenna in
          circuit with a coherer and small battery for operating
          through a relay the ordinary telegraphic receiver. This
          apparatus contains the essential features of all the
          systems now in use.
 
    Wireless telephone, an apparatus or contrivance for
       wireless telephony.
 
    Wireless telephony, telephony without wires, usually
       employing electric waves of high frequency emitted from an
       oscillator or generator, as in wireless telegraphy. A
       telephone transmitter causes fluctuations in these waves,
       it being the fluctuations only which affect the receiver.
       [Webster 1913 Suppl.] |  
radiotelephony (wn) | radiotelephony
     n 1: telephony that uses transmission by radio rather than by
          wire [syn: radiotelephone, radiotelephony, {wireless
          telephone}] |  
telephony (wn) | telephony
     n 1: transmitting speech at a distance [syn: telephone,
          telephony] |  
computer telephony (foldoc) | Computer Telephone Integration
 Computer Telephony
 Computer Telephony Integration
 CT
 
     (CTI or "- Telephony -") Enabling computers to
    know about and control telephony functions such as making and
    receiving voice, fax and data calls, telephone directory
    services and caller identification.
 
    CTI is used in call centres to link incoming calls to computer
    software functions such as database look-up of the caller's
    number, supported by services such as {Automatic Number
    Identification} and Dialled Number Identification Service.
 
    Application software (middleware) can link personal computers
    and servers with telephones and/or a PBX.  Telephony and
    software vendors such as AT&T, British Telecom, IBM,
    Novell, Microsoft and Intel have developed CTI services.
 
    The main CTI functions are integrating messaging with
    databases, word processors etc.; controlling voice, fax,
    and e-mail messaging systems from a single {application
    program}; graphical call control - using a {graphical user
    interface} to perform functions such as making and receiving
    calls, forwarding and conferencing; call and data
    association - provision of information about the caller from
    databases or other applications automatically before the call
    is answered or transferred; speech synthesis and {speech
    recognition}; automatic logging of call related information
    for invoicing purposes or callback.
 
    CTI can improve customer service, increase productivity, reduce
    costs and enhance workflow automation.
 
    IBM were one of the first with workable CTI, now sold as
    "CallPath".  Callware's Phonetastic is another middleware
    product.
 
    CTI came out of the 1980s call centre boom, where it linked
    central servers and IVRs with PBXes to provide call
    transfer and screen popping.  In the 1990s, efforts were
    made by several vendors, such as IBM, Novell TSAPI and
    Microsoft TAPI, to provide a version for desktop computers
    that would allow control of a desktop telephone and assist in
    hot desking.
 
    See also Telephony Application Programming Interface.
 
    (2012-11-18)
  |  
computer telephony integration (foldoc) | Computer Telephone Integration
 Computer Telephony
 Computer Telephony Integration
 CT
 
     (CTI or "- Telephony -") Enabling computers to
    know about and control telephony functions such as making and
    receiving voice, fax and data calls, telephone directory
    services and caller identification.
 
    CTI is used in call centres to link incoming calls to computer
    software functions such as database look-up of the caller's
    number, supported by services such as {Automatic Number
    Identification} and Dialled Number Identification Service.
 
    Application software (middleware) can link personal computers
    and servers with telephones and/or a PBX.  Telephony and
    software vendors such as AT&T, British Telecom, IBM,
    Novell, Microsoft and Intel have developed CTI services.
 
    The main CTI functions are integrating messaging with
    databases, word processors etc.; controlling voice, fax,
    and e-mail messaging systems from a single {application
    program}; graphical call control - using a {graphical user
    interface} to perform functions such as making and receiving
    calls, forwarding and conferencing; call and data
    association - provision of information about the caller from
    databases or other applications automatically before the call
    is answered or transferred; speech synthesis and {speech
    recognition}; automatic logging of call related information
    for invoicing purposes or callback.
 
    CTI can improve customer service, increase productivity, reduce
    costs and enhance workflow automation.
 
    IBM were one of the first with workable CTI, now sold as
    "CallPath".  Callware's Phonetastic is another middleware
    product.
 
    CTI came out of the 1980s call centre boom, where it linked
    central servers and IVRs with PBXes to provide call
    transfer and screen popping.  In the 1990s, efforts were
    made by several vendors, such as IBM, Novell TSAPI and
    Microsoft TAPI, to provide a version for desktop computers
    that would allow control of a desktop telephone and assist in
    hot desking.
 
    See also Telephony Application Programming Interface.
 
    (2012-11-18)
  |  
internet telephony (foldoc) | IP Telephony
 Internet Telephony
 IPT
 
     (IPT, Internet Telephony) Use of IP data
    connections to exchange voice and fax data that have
    traditionally been carried over the {public switched telephone
    network}.
 
    During the late 1990s, an increasing number of telephone calls
    have been routed over the Internet.  Calls made in this way
    avoid PSTN charges.  Unlike traditional telephony, IP
    telephony is relatively unregulated.
 
    Companies providing these services are known as {Internet
    Telephony Service Providers} (ITSPs).  They include telephone
    companies, cable TV companies and Internet Service Providers
    (ISPs).
 
    There are still many problems with voice quality, latency,
    compression algorithms, and quality of service.
 
    Voice over IP is an organised effort to standardise IP
    telephony.
 
    See also Computer Telephone Integration.
 
    {Internet Telephony Overview
    (http://fokus.gmd.de/research/cc/glone/projects/ipt/)}.
 
    (1999-03-17)
  |  
internet telephony service providers (foldoc) | Internet Telephony Service Providers
 ITSP
 
     (ITSP) Companies providing IP Telephony.
 
    (1999-04-26)
  |  
ip telephony (foldoc) | IP Telephony
 Internet Telephony
 IPT
 
     (IPT, Internet Telephony) Use of IP data
    connections to exchange voice and fax data that have
    traditionally been carried over the {public switched telephone
    network}.
 
    During the late 1990s, an increasing number of telephone calls
    have been routed over the Internet.  Calls made in this way
    avoid PSTN charges.  Unlike traditional telephony, IP
    telephony is relatively unregulated.
 
    Companies providing these services are known as {Internet
    Telephony Service Providers} (ITSPs).  They include telephone
    companies, cable TV companies and Internet Service Providers
    (ISPs).
 
    There are still many problems with voice quality, latency,
    compression algorithms, and quality of service.
 
    Voice over IP is an organised effort to standardise IP
    telephony.
 
    See also Computer Telephone Integration.
 
    {Internet Telephony Overview
    (http://fokus.gmd.de/research/cc/glone/projects/ipt/)}.
 
    (1999-03-17)
  |  
telephony (foldoc) | telephony
 
     Communication, often two-way, of spoken
    information, by means of electrical signals carried by wires
    or radio waves.  The term was used to indicate transmission of
    the voice, as opposed to telegraphy (done in Morse code
    and usually called "continuous wave" or CW transmission),
    radio teletypewriter (RTTY) transmission (also called FSK for
    "Frequency Shift Keying", the modulation scheme used by such
    machines), and later, facimile.
 
    (1995-03-14)
  |  
telephony application programming interface (foldoc) | Telephony Application Programming Interface
 TAPI
 
     (TAPI, or "Telephone Application
    Program Interface") A Windows 95 {Application Program
    Interface} enabling hardware independent access to telephone
    based communication.  TAPI covers a rather wide area of
    services from initialising the equipment (e.g. a modem) and
    placing a call to voice mail or control of a remote
    computer.
 
    [Telephone or Telephony?]
 
    (1995-12-05)
  |  
telephony user interface (foldoc) | Telephony User Interface
 
     (TUI) Either a software interface to
    telephony (e.g. a phone-capable PC) or a DTMF-based
    interface to software (e.g. voicemail).
 
    (2003-10-21)
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