Operation Manual
103 
ENGLISH
Router
A router is a network component that links sev-
eral computer networks. The router analyses (on 
the basis of layer 3 information) the network 
packages of a protocol it receives and forwards 
it to the intended destination network. Conven-
tional routers work on layer 3 of the application 
layer. A router has an interface for every net-
work connected to it. When data is received, the 
router determines the correct path to the destina-
tion and thereby the suitable interface via which 
the data can be transferred. For this it uses a 
locally available routing table that specifies via 
which router connection a particular network 
can be reached.
RoviGuide™
Electronic channel guide with various informa-
tion on the television programmes.
SCR (Single Channel Router)
Unrestricted single cable system. 
If your antenna system is equipped with a single 
cable multi-switch, the televisions which are con-
nected to this antenna system can receive televi-
sion channels independently from one another.
Security (WEP/WPA)
WEP (wired equivalent privacy) is the standard 
encryption algorithm for WLAN. It controls both 
access to the network as well as ensuring the 
confidentiality and integrity of data. This proce-
dure is considered insecure nowadays. For this 
reason, more recent WLAN installations should 
use the more secure WPA encryption.
Symbolrate
This is the number of transmitted symbols in the 
digital transmission technology per time unit 
Transponder
A transponder receives data on a satellite and 
then transmits it again. For example, an earth 
station can transmit data signals for television 
channels to a geostationary satellite, which 
sends this back to earth. Any suitable satellite 
antenna with visual contact to the satellite can 
receive the signal.
Vibrant Colour
Increases the colour contrast and the contrast 
adjustment. This setting is mostly too strong for 
use with normal pictures and should only be 
used where necessary (low or off) otherwise 
nuances in the image can be suppressed.
Wi-Fi
The Wi-Fi Alliance is an organisation that has 
taken on the task of certifying products from 
different manufacturers on the basis of the IEEE-
802.11 standard, thereby ensuring that different 
wireless devices can operate in parallel.
On 31 October 2002, the consortium an-
nounced a new encryption technology – Wi-Fi 
Protected Access (WPA) – a part of the (then) 
forthcoming IEEE standard 802.11i which would 
replace the WEP encryption procedure, which 
was already regarded as insecure before the 
new standard came into force. After 802.11i 
came into force, the Wi-Fi group coined the term 
WPA2.
IEEE 802.11e is an industrial standard issued 
by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics En-
gineers (IEEE) and a supplement to the wireless 
LAN standard IEEE 802.11 for supporting the 
quality of service.
802.11e works according to a similar principle 
as the QoS procedure DiffServ. Data packages 
in the WLAN are marked by the sender and the 
access point is stopped in order to handle pack-
ages with higher priority.
With the aid of 802.11e, real-time application 
such as Voice over IP are better supported as 
they require a certain bandwidth in the network 
to ensure the connection is not interrupted if 
other network traffic creates too great a burden 
on the available data transfer rate.
GLOSSARY
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------










