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| Structured Cabling |
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Structured cabling is building or campus telecommunications cabling infrastructure that consists of a number of standardized smaller elements (hence structured) called subsystems.
Structured cabling falls into six subsystems: |
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Entrance Facilities are where the building interfaces with the outside world. |
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Equipment Rooms host equipment which serves the users inside the building. |
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Telecommunications Rooms house telecommunication equipment which connects the backbone and the horizontal cabling subsystems. |
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Backbone Cabling connect between the entrance facilities, equipment rooms and telecommunications rooms. |
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Horizontal Cabling connect telecommunications rooms to individual outlets on the floor. |
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Work-Area Components connect end-user equipment to outlets of the horizontal cabling system |
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| Networking |
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In the world of computers, networking is the practice of linking two or more computing devices together for the purpose of sharing data. Networks are built with a mix of computer hardware and computer software. Networks can be categorized in several different ways. One approach defines the type of network according to the geographic area it spans. Local area networks (LANs), for example, typically reach across a single home, whereas wide area networks (WANs), reach across cities, states, or even across the world. The Internet is the world's largest public WAN. |
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| Storage |
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Computer data storage, often called storage or memory, refers to computer components, devices, and recording media that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time. Computer data storage provides one of the core functions of the modern computer, that of information retention. It is one of the fundamental components of all modern computers, and coupled with a central processing unit (CPU, a processor), implements the basic computer model used since the 1940s. |
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| IT Test & Measurement |
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The test and measurement industry centers on the production of tools used to analyze, validate, and verify measurements of electronic and mechanical systems. Due to the increasing need for greater accuracy and higher definition measurement, the tools involved in the test and measurement industry are constantly developing to accommodate technological advancements in the industries they cater to. The test and measurement industry creates both general use and highly specialized tools and caters primarily to high-tech industrial, automotive, communications, and medical electronics industries. |
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| Surveillance |
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Surveillance is the monitoring of the behaviour, activities, or other changing information, usually of people and often in a surreptitious manner. It most usually refers to observation of individuals or groups by government organizations, but disease surveillance, for example, is monitoring the progress of a disease in a community.
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| PA |
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A public address or "PA" system is an electronic amplification system with a mixer, amplifier and loudspeakers, used to reinforce a given sound, e.g., a person making a speech, a DJ playing pre-recorded music, and distributing the sound throughout a venue or building. PA systems with a larger number of speakers are widely used in institutional and commercial buildings, to read announcements or declare states of emergency. |
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| Access Control |
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Access control is a system which enables an authority to control access to areas and resources in a given physical facility or computer-based information system. An access control system, within the field of physical security, is generally seen as the second layer in the security of a physical structure.
Access control is, in reality, an everyday phenomenon. A lock on a car door is essentially a form of access control. A PIN on an ATM system at a bank is another means of access control. The possession of access control is of prime importance when persons seek to secure important, confidential, or sensitive information and equipment. |
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| Gate Automation |
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