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  2. Baseband - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseband

    A baseband channel or lowpass channel (or system, or network) is a communication channel that can transfer frequencies that are very near zero. [4] Examples are serial cables and local area networks (LANs), as opposed to passband channels such as radio frequency channels and passband filtered wires of the analog telephone network.

  3. Base transceiver station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_transceiver_station

    A base transceiver station (BTS) or a baseband unit [1] (BBU) is a piece of equipment that facilitates wireless communication between user equipment (UE) and a network. UEs are devices like mobile phones (handsets), WLL phones, computers with wireless Internet connectivity, or antennas mounted on buildings or telecommunication towers.

  4. Open Base Station Architecture Initiative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Base_Station...

    The Baseband Block processes the baseband signal. The functions include encoding/decoding, ciphering/deciphering, frequency hopping (GSM), spreading and Rake receiver (WCDMA), MAC (WiMAX), protocol frame processing, MIMO etc. The Transport Block interfaces to external network, and provides functions such as QoS, security functions and ...

  5. Data communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_communication

    According to the most common definition of a digital signal, both baseband and passband signals representing bit-streams are considered as digital transmission, while an alternative definition only considers the baseband signal as digital, and passband transmission of digital data as a form of digital-to-analog conversion. [citation needed]

  6. List of computing and IT abbreviations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_computing_and_IT...

    NIC—Network Interface Controller or Network Interface Card; NIM—No Internal Message; NIO—Non-blocking I/O; NIST—National Institute of Standards and Technology; NLE—Non-Linear Editing system; NLP—Natural Language Processing; NLS—Native Language Support; NMI—Non-Maskable Interrupt; NNTP—Network News Transfer Protocol; NOC ...

  7. Common Public Radio Interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Public_Radio_Interface

    The purpose of CPRI is to allow replacement of a copper or coax cable connection between a radio transceiver (used example for mobile-telephone communication and typically located in a tower) and a base station/baseband unit [3] (typically located at the ground nearby), so the connection can be made to a remote and more convenient location. [4]

  8. Baseband processor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseband_processor

    Baseband processor SiTel SC14434. A baseband processor (also known as baseband radio processor, BP, or BBP) is a device (a chip or part of a chip) in a network interface controller that manages all the radio functions (all functions that require an antenna); however, this term is generally not used in reference to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth radios.

  9. Signaling (telecommunications) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signaling_(telecommunications)

    In the public switched telephone network (PSTN), in-band signaling is the exchange of call control information within the same physical channel, or within the same frequency band, that the message (the callers' voice) is using.