Specifications

REFERENCE MANUAL 139
GLOSSARY
Access code A code number dialed to gain ac-
cess to a telephone line, such as dialing the number
9 to reach an outside line.
Application ID An alphanumeric code that identi-
fies an application program downloaded to a termi-
nal from a download computer. For VeriCentre
application downloads, the application ID is stored in
the CONFIG.SYS record which begins with the *ZA
key. An Omni 37xx application ID can be up to 21
characters long. For VeriCentre Download Manage-
ment Module, the application ID, as well as other
CONFIG.SYS variables, may differ from those used
for VeriCentre.
Application program The ordered set of pro-
grammed instructions by which a computer performs
an intended task or series of tasks.
Application prompt The information shown on
the terminal’s display panel when power is applied to
the terminal, assuming that an application program
has already been downloaded into the terminal’s
memory and authenticated by the file authentication
module. The application prompt often contains a
graphical logo, and date and time, but it can consist
of anything the programmer chooses for that pur-
pose.
ASCII Abbreviation for
American Standard Code for
Information Interchange
. A 7-bit code (with no parity
bit) that provides a total of 128 bit patterns. ASCII
codes are widely used for information interchange in
data processing and communication systems.
Back-to-back application download The pro-
cess of copying the contents of one terminal’s appli-
cation memory to another terminal’s application
memory. A terminal-to-terminal application upload
require that the sending and receiving terminal be
connected to each other by a serial cable. The same
operation as a
terminal-to-terminal
application up-
load.
Bar code Optical binary code imprinted on mer-
chandise in retail stores. To support specific applica-
tions, an optional bar code reader can be attached to
the Omni 37xx to read and process bar codes.
Bar code reader A pencil- or wand-shaped optical
scanner used to read bar codes. To read the code,
you drag the tip of the bar code reader across the
length of the bar code, in a left-to-right or right-to-left
direction.
Baud The number of times per second that a sys-
tem, especially a data transmission channel, chang-
es state. The state of a system may represent a bit,
digit, or symbol. For a POS terminal, the baud rate
indicates the number of bits per second that are
transmitted or received by the terminal’s serial ports
and modem.
Bit Short for
binary digit
. Either of the two digits 0
and 1 in the binary number system. Also, a unit of in-
formation equal to one binary decision. The bit is the
smallest unit of storage and hence of information in
any binary system within a computer.