var glossaryTitle = new Array();
var glossaryText = new Array();
var glossaryText2 = new Array();
var glossaryText3 = new Array();
var glossaryImage = new Array();

// http://www.who-wrote-the-bible.com/is-the-bible-true.htm

glossaryTitle[1] = 'Anthropomorphism';
glossaryText[1] = 'Anthropomorphism is the ascription of human qualities, characteristics, feelings, attributes, and behavior to a non-human object either animate or inanimate. In theology, anthropomorphism is attributing human qualities and behavioral processes to a deity, and nowhere is this more evident than in the oldest books of the Bible.';
glossaryText2[1] = 'Please refer to the following passages in the Old Testament as examples: Genesis 3:8-9; Genesis  3:22-24; Genesis  11:5-7; Genesis 32: 30;   Exodus 20: 11; Exodus 24: 9-11; Exodus 31: 18; Exodus 33: 22-23; Deuteronomy 4: 24; Psalms 78: 49; Jeremiah  11: 7; Jeremiah 25: 37.';

glossaryTitle[2] = 'Johnson, Moreland, Craig';
glossaryText[2] = 'For a delightful entertainment that demonstrates how supernatural presuppositions can completely bias reason, logic, even common sense, and turn reasonably intelligent men into disciples enchanted by the artifice of words, please refer to the following:';
glossaryText2[2]  = '<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0830822674/thegreaterseat0a" target="_blank"><b>The Wedge of Truth</b> by Phillip E. Johnson</a><br><br><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0830819290/thegreaterseat0a" target="_blank"><b>Reason in the Balance</b> by Phillip E. Johnson</a><br><br><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0801062225/thegreaterseat0a" target="_blank"><b>Scaling the Secular City: A Defense of Christianity</b> by J. P. Moreland</a><br><br><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0415235243/thegreaterseat0a" target="_blank"><b>Naturalism: A Critical Analysis</b> by William Lane Craig & J. P. Moreland</a><br><br><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0830826947/thegreaterseat0a" target="_blank"><b>Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview</b> by J. P. Moreland & William Lane Craig</a><br>';

glossaryTitle[3] = 'Empiricism';
glossaryText[3] = 'Empiricism is a theory which holds that the origin of all knowledge is sense experience. The term also refers to the method of observation and experiment used in the natural sciences. Often, empiricism is contrasted with rationalism, a theory which holds that the mind may apprehend some truths directly, without requiring the medium of the senses. Empiricists tend to emphasize the tentative and probabilistic nature of knowledge, while rationalists tend to be dogmatic and assert they have found a method to discover absolutely certain knowledge. Empiricists see philosophical skepticism as limiting what the human mind can hope to accomplish and as a guide to those areas of inquiry we can usefully apply our talents towards. Rationalists see skepticism as something which must be refuted on every count in order to establish a sure footing for absolutely certain knowledge.';


glossaryTitle[4] = 'Pseudonymity';
glossaryText[4] = '“Pseudonymity” is a term referring to an unknown author assuming the name of another more prestigious or better-known author, writing supposedly on his behalf—or in his name. The pseudonymous letters attributed to Paul are also called "Deutero-Pauline." Most bible scholars agree that Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians, 1-2 Timothy, Titus, 1-2 Peter, Jude, James, and Revelation are all pseudonymous in origin.';
glossaryText2[4] = 'For further discussion on pseudonymity, see:<br><a href="http://www.theology.edu/ntintro/EPH.htm" target=_blank>Ephesians (with a brief excursus on Pseudonymity)</a><br><a href="http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/article_nt_gempf.html" target=_blank>Pseudonymity and the New Testament by Conrad Gempf</a><br><a href="http://cranfordville.com/NT-Lec31-3229.html" target=_blank>Interpreting New Testament Documents</a><br><a href="http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/b-greek/1999-May/005403.html" target=_blank>Acceptable Pseudonymity?</a>';


glossaryTitle[5] = '<i>A Priori</i>'; 
glossaryText[5] = 'Not derived from experience; deductive; lacking proof; arguing from general principle to expected effect. Philosophers have distinguished between two kinds of knowledge: <i>a priori</i> knowledge and <i>a posteriori</i> knowledge. <i>A priori</i> knowledge is knowledge gained or justified by reason alone, without the direct or indirect influence of experience (observation of the world through sense perception.) <i>A posteriori</i> knowledge is knowledge attained or whose justification requires reference to experience. This is also called empirical knowledge. <br><br>One of the fundamental questions in epistemology is whether there is any non-trivial <i>a priori</i> knowledge. Generally speaking rationalists believe that there is, while empiricists believe that all knowledge is ultimately derived through the five senses. The fields of knowledge most often suggested as having <i>a priori</i> status are logic and mathematics, which deal primarily with abstract, formal objects. Empiricists have traditionally denied even <i>these</i> fields contain <i>a priori</i> knowledge since abstract ideas would not be possible unless first introduced through the fives senses.';

glossaryTitle[6] = 'Rationalism';
glossaryText[6] = 'Rationalism holds that reason alone, unaided by experience, can arrive at basic truth regarding the world. Associated with rationalism is the doctrine of innate ideas and the method of logically deducing truths about the world from “self-evident” premises. Rationalism is opposed to empiricism on the question of the source of knowledge and the techniques for verification of knowledge. Descartes, Leibniz, and Spinoza all represent the rationalist position, and Locke and Hume the empirical. Immanuel Kant in his critical philosophy attempted a synthesis of these two positions.';
glossaryText2[6] = 'More loosely, rationalism may signify confidence in the intelligible, orderly character of the world and in the mind\'s ability to discern such order. It is opposed by irrationalism, a view that either denies meaning and coherence in reality or discredits the ability of reason to discern such coherence. Irrational philosophies accordingly stress the will at the expense of reason, as exemplified in the existentialism of Jean-Paul Sartre or Karl Jaspers.';

glossaryTitle[7] = 'Aramaic ';
glossaryText[7] = 'Aramaic (pronounced a-ra-MAY-ik) is an ancient, mostly defunct group of related Semitic dialects originating in, and very similar to, Hebrew. Their similarity extends to their written alphabet, which looks a prototype of Hebrew and is written right-to-left as well. There are two major dialects of Aramaic: Western (i.e., Palestinian) and Eastern (i.e., Syriac); others are still spoken in parts of Syria today.';
glossaryText2[7] = 'Tradition holds that "Aramaic" comes from the biblical Aram, son of Shem and grandson of Noah, following the Great Flood. Actually, Aramaic was used by the conquering Assyrians as a language of administration communication, and later adopted by the Babylonian and Persian empires (which ruled from India to Ethiopia) and employed as the official language. During this period (about 700–320 BCE), Aramaic held a position similar to that occupied by English today. The most important documents of this period are numerous papyri from Egypt and Palestine. 0ur first glimpse of Aramaic comes from a small number of ancient royal inscriptions dated from 900-700 BCE.';

glossaryTitle[8] = 'Plagiarism';
glossaryText[8] = 'To appropriate the writings, graphic representations or ideas of another person or persons and represent them as one\'s own, (that is, without proper attribution). Plagiarism is a form of intellectual property violation. To use the ideas or words of another person as one\'s own without crediting the source. ';

//B
glossaryTitle[9] = 'Critical Thinking';
glossaryText[9] = 'The disciplined ability and willingness to assess evidence and claims, to seek a breadth of contradicting as well as confirming information, to make objective judgments on the basis of well supported reasons as a guide to belief and action, and to monitor one\’s thinking while doing so (metacognition). The thinking process that is appropriate for critical thinking depends on the knowledge domain (e.g., scientific, mathematical, historical, anthropological, economic, philosophical, moral) but the universal criteria are: clarity, accuracy, precision, consistency, relevance, sound empirical evidence, good reasons, depth, breadth and fairness.';
glossaryText2[9] = 'For more information, please access the <br><a href="http://www.control-z.com/1000/pages/offsite.html?crit_th.html" target="_blank"><b>Critical Thinking Recommendations</b></a> page.';

glossaryTitle[10] = 'Masoretic Text';
glossaryText[10] = 'The Masoretic Text (MT) is the Hebrew text of the Tanakh approved for general use in Judaism. It is also widely used in translations of the Old Testament of the Bible. It was primarily compiled, edited and distributed by a group of Jews known as the Masoretes between the first and tenth centuries CE. It has numerous differences when compared to the Septuagint, of both little and great significance.';
glossaryText2[10] = 'The Hebrew word <em>mesorah</em> (&#1502;&#1505;&#1493;&#1512;&#1492;)  refers to the transmission of a tradition.  In fact, in a very broad sense it can refer to the entire chain of Jewish tradition.  But in terms of the Masoretic Text the word <em>mesorah</em> has a very specific meaning: it refers to concise marginal notes in manuscripts (and later printings) of the Hebrew Bible which note textual details, usually about the precise spelling of words. The oldest complete manuscripts of the Masoretic Text known to still exist date from approximately the ninth century CE, but there are many earlier fragments that appear to belong in the same textual family (e.g., among the Dead Sea Scrolls).';


glossaryTitle[11] = 'Gospel Introductions';
glossaryText[11] = 'A device that forwards packets of information from one segment of a network to another. A bridge forwards only those packets necessary for communication between the segments.';
glossaryImage[11] = '';

glossaryTitle[12] = 'Naturalism';
glossaryText[12] = 'Naturalism is any of several philosophical stances, typically those descended from materialism and pragmatism, that do not distinguish the supernatural from nature. Naturalism does not claim that phenomena or hypotheses commonly labeled as supernatural necessarily do not exist or are wrong, but insists that they are not inherently different from natural phenomena or hypotheses, and that all phenomena and hypotheses can be studied by the same methods. Any method of inquiry or investigation or any procedure for gaining knowledge that limits itself to natural, physical, and material approaches and explanations can be described as naturalistic. Distinctions are sometimes made between two approaches, the first being methodological naturalism or scientific naturalism, and the second ontological naturalism or metaphysical naturalism. The first approach underlies the application of the scientific method in science, which makes the methodological assumption that observable events in nature are explained only by natural causes without assuming the existence or non-existence of the supernatural, and hence does not accept supernatural explanations. The second approach refers to the metaphysical assumption that the natural world (including the universe) is all that exists.';

glossaryTitle[13] = 'Enculturation';
glossaryText[13] = 'Enculturation is the process whereby an established culture teaches an individual by repetition its accepted norms and values, so that the individual can become an accepted member of the society and find their suitable role. Most importantly, it establishes a context of boundaries and correctness that dictates what is and is not permissible within that society\'s framework.';
glossaryText2[13] = 'It is the process of learning that takes the person and teaches him or her the ways of life of their people or country. It is a life-long process, affecting not only the child, but the adult too. Enculturation is learned through communication in the form of speech, words, and gestures. The six things of culture that are learned are: technological, economic, political, interactive, ideological and world view.';
glossaryText3[13] = 'The individual can become an accepted member and fulfill the needed functions and roles of the group. Most importantly the individual knows and establishes a context of boundaries and accepted behavior that dictates what is acceptable and not acceptable within the framework of that society. It teaches the individual their role within society as well as what is accepted behavior within that society and lifestyle.';
glossaryImage[13] = '';

glossaryTitle[14] = 'Contact Me';
glossaryText[14] = 'If you <i>\'feel the urge\'</i>, you are invited to write me at <A HREF=mailto:craigd@control-z.com>craigd@control-z.com</a> (I have <b>Spam Arrest</b> installed so you will have to reply to a challenge in order for me to receive your email).<BR><BR>If you want a reply, please include a list of the last <i>ten</i> (10) books you have read that address religion, comparative religion, mythology, history, psychology, philosophy, cognition, or science. While some of these books may be decidedly Christian in nature, <i>half</i> of them should come from a perspective <i>other</i> than Christian. An honest questioner will look at both sides of an issue and read material that comes from many different sources. Reading only Christian books (or Mormon books, or Islamic books, or scientific books, or freethinking books, etc) does <i>not</i> promote <i>honest truth-seeking</i> and does not remove you from indoctrination found "inside the box."<BR><BR>If you are truly interested in the discovery of truth, you will step "outside the box" and examine all the necessary information available there. Once you find the courage to step "outside the box" you will discover there is a lot more information (and more to <i>reality</i>) than you ever dreamed existed.';
glossaryImage[14] = '';

//C
glossaryTitle[15] = 'cable modem';
glossaryText[15] = 'A device that enables a broadband connection to access the Internet. Cable modems rely on cable television infrastructure, in other words, the data travels on the same lines as you cable television.';
glossaryImage[15] = '';

glossaryTitle[16] = 'CAT 5 cable';
glossaryText[16] = 'Abbreviation for "Category 5 cable." A type of Ethernet cable that has a maximum data rate of 100 Mbps.';
glossaryImage[16] = '';

glossaryTitle[17] = 'channel';
glossaryText[17] = 'A path or link through which information passes between two devices.';
glossaryImage[17] = '';

glossaryTitle[18] = 'client';
glossaryText[18] = 'Any computer or program that connects to, or requests the services of, another computer or program on a network. For a local area network or the Internet, a client is a computer that uses shared network resources provided by a server.';
glossaryImage[18] = '';

glossaryTitle[19] = 'client/server network';
glossaryText[19] = 'A network of two or more computers that rely on a central server to mediate the connections or provide additional system resources. This dependence on a server differentiates a client/server network from a peer-to-peer network.';
glossaryImage[19] = '';

glossaryTitle[20] = 'computer name';
glossaryText[20] = 'A name that uniquely identifies a computer on the network so that all its shared resources can be accessed by other computers on the network. One computer name cannot be the same as any other computer or domain name on the network.';
glossaryImage[20] = '';


glossaryTitle[21] = 'crossover cable';
glossaryText[21] = 'A type of cable that facilitates network communications. A crossover cable is a cable that is used to interconnect two computers by "crossing over" (reversing) their respective pin contacts.';
glossaryImage[21] = '';

//D
glossaryTitle[22] = 'DHCP';
glossaryText[22] = 'Acronym for "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol." A TCP/IP protocol that automatically assigns temporary IP addresses to computers on a local area network (LAN). Microsoft Broadband Networking base stations support the use of DHCP. You can use DHCP to share one Internet connection with multiple computers on a network.';
glossaryImage[22] = '';

glossaryTitle[23] = 'dial-up connection';
glossaryText[23] = 'An Internet connection of limited duration that uses a public telephone network rather than a dedicated circuit or some other type of private network. The Microsoft Broadband Networking hardware does not support the use of a dial-up connection to the Internet.';
glossaryImage[23] = '';

glossaryTitle[24] = 'DMZ';
glossaryText[24] = 'Acronym for "demilitarized zone." A collection of devices and subnets placed between a private network and the Internet to help protect the private network from unauthorized Internet users.';
glossaryImage[24] = '';

glossaryTitle[25] = 'DNS';
glossaryText[25] = 'Acronym for "Domain Name System." A data query service chiefly used on the Internet for translating host names into Internet addresses. The DNS database maps DNS domain names to IP addresses, so that users can locate computers and services through user-friendly names.';
glossaryImage[25] = '';

glossaryTitle[26] = 'domain';
glossaryText[26] = 'In a networked computer environment, a collection of computers that share a common domain database and security policy. A domain is administered as a unit with common rules and procedures, and each domain has a unique name.';
glossaryImage[26] = '';

glossaryTitle[27] = 'domain controller';
glossaryText[27] = 'In a networked computer environment, a computer running Active Directory that manages user access to a network, which includes logging on, authentication, and access to the directory and shared resources.';
glossaryImage[27] = '';

glossaryTitle[28] = 'domain name';
glossaryText[28] = 'An address of a network connection that identifies the owner of that address in a hierarchical format: server.organization.type. For example, www.whitehouse.gov identifies the Web server at the White House, which is part of the U.S. government.';
glossaryImage[28] = '';

glossaryTitle[29] = 'drive';
glossaryText[29] = 'An area of storage that is formatted with a file system and has a drive letter. The storage can be a floppy disk (which is often represented by drive A), a hard disk (usually drive C), a CD-ROM (usually drive D), or another type of disk. You can view the contents of a drive by clicking the drive\'s icon in Windows Explorer or My Computer. Drive C (also known as the hard disk), contains the computer\'s operating system and the programs that have been installed on the computer. It also has the capacity to store many of the files and folders that you create.';
glossaryImage[29] = '';


glossaryTitle[30] = 'driver';
glossaryText[30] = 'Within a networking context, a device that mediates communication between a computer and a network adapter installed on that computer.';
glossaryImage[30] = '';

glossaryTitle[31] = 'DSL';
glossaryText[31] = 'Acronym for "Digital Subscriber Line." A constant, high-speed digital connection to the Internet that uses standard copper telephone wires.';
glossaryImage[31] = '';

glossaryTitle[32] = 'DSL modem';
glossaryText[32] = 'A device that enables a broadband connection to access the Internet. DSL modems rely on telephone lines that operate at DSL speeds.';
glossaryImage[32] = '';

glossaryTitle[33] = 'duplex';
glossaryText[33] = 'A mode of connection. Full-duplex transmission allows for the simultaneous transfer of information between the sender and the receiver. Half-duplex transmission allows for the transfer of information in only one direction at a time.';
glossaryImage[33] = '';

glossaryTitle[34] = 'dynamic IP address';
glossaryText[34] = 'The IP address assigned (using the DHCP protocol) to a device that requires it. A dynamic IP address can also be assigned to a base station, gateway, or router by an ISP.';
glossaryImage[34] = '';

//E
glossaryTitle[35] = 'edge computer';
glossaryText[35] = 'The computer on a network that connects the network to the Internet. Other devices on the network connect to this computer. The computer running the most current, reliable operating system is the best choice to designate as the edge computer.';
glossaryImage[35] = '';


glossaryTitle[36] = 'encryption';
glossaryText[36] = 'The process of encoding data to prevent unauthorized access, especially during transmission. Microsoft Broadband Networking wireless hardware relies on encryption to ensure that data transmissions cannot be accessed by users outside the network. Also see WEP.';
glossaryImage[36] = '';

glossaryTitle[37] = 'Ethernet';
glossaryText[37] = 'A networking standard that uses cables to provide network access. Ethernet is the most widely-installed  technology to connect computers together.';
glossaryImage[37] = '';

glossaryTitle[38] = 'Ethernet cable';
glossaryText[38] = 'A type of cable that facilitates network communications. An ethernet cable comes in a couple of  flavors. there is twisted pair, and coax  ethernet cables. Each of these allow data to travel at 10Mbit per second.';
glossaryImage[38] = '';

//F
glossaryTitle[39] = 'firewall';
glossaryText[39] = 'A security system that helps protect a network from external threats, such as hacker attacks, originating outside the network. A hardware firewall is a connection routing device that has specific data checking settings and that helps protect all of the devices connected to it. The Microsoft Broadband Networking base stations include a hardware firewall. A software firewall resides on a single computer, helping to protect that computer from external threats. For information about the Internet Connection Firewall, see Microsoft Windows XP Help.';
glossaryImage[39] = '';

glossaryTitle[40] = 'firmware';
glossaryText[40] = 'Software information stored in nonvolatile memory on a device.';
glossaryImage[40] = '';

glossaryTitle[41] = 'flash memory';
glossaryText[41] = 'A type of memory that does not lose data when power is removed from it. Flash memory is commonly used as a supplement to or replacement for hard disks in portable computers. In this context, flash memory either is built in to the unit or, more commonly, is available as a PC Card that can be plugged in to a PCMCIA slot.';
glossaryImage[41] = '';

glossaryTitle[42] = 'FTP';
glossaryText[42] = 'Acronym for "File Transfer Protocol." The standard Internet protocol for downloading, or transferring, files from one computer to another.';
glossaryImage[42] = '';

//G
glossaryTitle[43] = 'gateway';
glossaryText[43] = 'A device (also known as a Base Station or router) that acts as a central point for networked devices, receives transmitted messages, and forwards them. Microsoft Broadband Networking base stations can link many computers on a single network, and can share an encrypted Internet connection with wired and wireless devices.';
glossaryImage[43] = '';

glossaryTitle[44] = 'gateway address';
glossaryText[44] = 'The IP address you use when you make a connection outside your immediate network.';
glossaryImage[44] = '';

//H
glossaryTitle[45] = 'hexadecimal';
glossaryText[45] = 'A numbering system that uses 16 rather than 10 as the base for representing numbers. It is therefore referred to as a base-16 numbering system. The hexadecimal system uses the digits 0 through 9 and the letters A through F (uppercase or lowercase) to represent the decimal numbers 0 through 15. For example, the hexadecimal letter D represents the decimal number 13. One hexadecimal digit is equivalent to 4 bits, and 1 byte can be expressed by two hexadecimal digits.';
glossaryImage[45] = '';


glossaryTitle[46] = 'HomePNA';
glossaryText[46] = 'An industry standard that ensures that through existing telephone lines and a registered jack, computer users on a home network can share resources (such as an Internet connection, files, and printers) without interfering with regular telephone service. HomePNA currently offers data transmission speeds of up to 10 Mbps.';
glossaryImage[46] = '';

glossaryTitle[47] = 'HomeRF';
glossaryText[47] = 'An industry standard that combines 802.11b and portable phone standards for home networking. It uses frequency hopping (switching of radio frequencies within a given bandwidth to reduce the risk of unauthorized signal interception). HomeRF offers data transmission speeds of up to 1.6 Mbps at distances of up to 150 feet.';
glossaryImage[47] = '';

glossaryTitle[48] = 'host name';
glossaryText[48] = 'The DNS name of a device on a network, used to simplify the process of locating computers on a network.';
glossaryImage[48] = '';

glossaryTitle[49] = 'hub';
glossaryText[49] = 'A device that has multiple ports and that serves as a central connection point for communication lines from all devices on a network. When data arrives at one port, it is copied to the other ports.';
glossaryImage[49] = '';

//I
glossaryTitle[50] = 'ICF';
glossaryText[50] = 'Acronym for "Internet Connection Firewall." Firewall software that You use to set restrictions on what information is communicated between your network and the Internet.';
glossaryImage[50] = '';

glossaryTitle[51] = 'ICS';
glossaryText[51] = 'Acronym for "Internet Connection Sharing." A software feature in Windows that allows computers on a network to access online services through a single Internet connection. Microsoft Broadband Networking hardware replaces software ICS.';
glossaryImage[51] = '';

glossaryTitle[52] = 'IEEE';
glossaryText[52] = 'Acronym for "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers." A society of engineering and electronics professionals that develops standards for the electrical, electronics, computer engineering, and science-related industries. The IEEE (Eye-triple-E) is a non-profit, technical professional association of more than 377,000 individual members in 150 countries. The full name is the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., although the organization is most popularly known and referred to by the letters I-E-E-E.';
glossaryImage[52] = '';

glossaryTitle[53] = 'infrastructure network';
glossaryText[53] = 'A network configuration in which wireless devices connect to a wireless access point (such as a base station) instead of connecting to each other directly.';
glossaryImage[53] = '';

glossaryTitle[54] = 'Internet domain';
glossaryText[54] = 'x';
glossaryImage[54] = '';

glossaryTitle[55] = 'intranet';
glossaryText[55] = 'A network within an organization that uses Internet technologies (such a Web browser for viewing information) and protocols (such as TCP/IP), but is available only to certain people, such as employees of a company. Also called a private network. Some intranets offer access to the Internet, but such connections are directed through a firewall.';
glossaryImage[55] = '';

glossaryTitle[56] = 'IP';
glossaryText[56] = 'Acronym for "Internet Protocol." The protocol within TCP/IP that is used to send data between computers over the Internet. More specifically, this protocol governs the routing of data messages, which are transmitted in smaller components called packets.';
glossaryImage[56] = '';

glossaryTitle[57] = 'IP address';
glossaryText[57] = 'Acronym for "Internet Protocol" address. IP is the protocol within TCP/IP that is used to send data between computers over the Internet. An IP address is an assigned number used to identify a computer that is connected to a network through TCP/IP. An IP address consists of four numbers (each of which can be no greater than 255) separated by periods, such as 192.168.1.1.';
glossaryImage[57] = '';

glossaryTitle[58] = 'IPX';
glossaryText[58] = 'Acronym for "Internetwork Packet Exchange." The protocol in Novell NetWare that governs the addressing and routing of packets within and between LANs. It is supported by all Microsoft operating systems and is a required protocol for many computer games.';
glossaryImage[58] = '';

glossaryTitle[59] = 'ISO/OSI reference model';
glossaryText[59] = 'Abbreviation for "International Organization for Standardization Open Systems Interconnection" reference model. An architecture that standardizes levels of service and types of interaction for computers that exchange information through a communications network. The ISO/OSI reference model separates computer-to-computer communications into seven protocol layers, or levels; each builds on and relies on the standards contained in the levels below it. The lowest of the seven layers deals solely with hardware links; the highest deals with software interactions at the program level. It is a fundamental blueprint designed to help guide the creation of hardware and software for networks.';
glossaryImage[59] = '';

glossaryTitle[60] = 'ISP';
glossaryText[60] = 'Acronym for "Internet service provider." A company that provides individuals or companies access to the Internet.';
glossaryImage[60] = '';

//K
glossaryTitle[61] = 'Kbps';
glossaryText[61] = 'Abbreviation of "kilobits per second." Data transfer speed, as through a modem or on a network, measured in multiples of 1,000 bits per second.';
glossaryImage[61] = '';

//L
glossaryTitle[62] = 'LAN';
glossaryText[62] = 'Acronym for "local area network." A group of computers and other devices dispersed over a relatively limited area (for example, a building) and connected by a communications link that enables any device to interact with any other on the network.';
glossaryImage[62] = '';

//M
glossaryTitle[63] = 'MAC address';
glossaryText[63] = 'Abbreviation for "media access control" address. The address that is used for communication between network adapters on the same subnet. Each network adapter is manufactured with its own unique MAC address.';
glossaryImage[63] = '';

glossaryTitle[64] = 'MAC layer';
glossaryText[64] = 'Abbreviation for "media access control" layer. The lower of two sublayers that make up the data-link layer in the ISO/OSI reference model. The MAC layer manages access to the physical network, so a protocol like Ethernet works at this layer.';
glossaryImage[64] = '';

glossaryTitle[65] = 'mapping';
glossaryText[65] = 'A process that allows one computer to communicate with a resource located on another computer on the network. For example, if you want to access a folder that resides on another computer, you "map to" that folder, as long as the computer that holds the folder has been configured to share it.';
glossaryImage[65] = '';

glossaryTitle[66] = 'Mbps';
glossaryText[66] = 'Abbreviation of "megabits per second." A unit of bandwidth measurement that defines the speed at which information can be transferred through a network or Ethernet cable. One megabyte is roughly equivalent to eight megabits.';
glossaryImage[66] = '';

glossaryTitle[67] = 'modem';
glossaryText[67] = 'A device that transmits and receives information between computers.';
glossaryImage[67] = '';

//N
glossaryTitle[68] = 'NAT';
glossaryText[68] = 'Acronym for "network address translation." The process of converting between IP addresses used within a private network and Internet IP addresses. NAT enables all of the computers on a network to share one IP address. The Microsoft Broadband Networking base stations support NAT, which provides an extra layer of network security by masking the actual IP addresses of the computers that are using a base station.';
glossaryImage[68] = '';

glossaryTitle[69] = 'network';
glossaryText[69] = 'A collection of two or more computers that are connected to each other through wired or wireless means. These computers can share access to the Internet and the use of files, printers, and other equipment.';
glossaryImage[69] = '';

glossaryTitle[70] = 'network adapter';
glossaryText[70] = 'Also known as a "network interface card" (NIC). An expansion card or other device used to provide network access to a computer, printer, or other device.';
glossaryImage[70] = '';

glossaryTitle[71] = 'network name';
glossaryText[71] = 'The single name of a grouping of computers that are linked together to form a network.';
glossaryImage[71] = '';

glossaryTitle[72] = 'network printer';
glossaryText[72] = 'A printer that is not connected directly to a computer, but is instead connected directly to a network through a wired or wireless connection.';
glossaryImage[72] = '';

//P
glossaryTitle[73] = 'packet';
glossaryText[73] = 'A unit of information transmitted as a whole from one device to another on a network.';
glossaryImage[73] = '';

glossaryTitle[74] = 'PC Card';
glossaryText[74] = 'A peripheral device that adds memory, mass storage, modem capability, or other networking services to portable computers.';
glossaryImage[74] = '';

glossaryTitle[75] = 'PCI';
glossaryText[75] = 'Acronym for "Peripheral Component Interconnect." A specific bus type designed to be used with devices that have high bandwidth requirements.';
glossaryImage[75] = '';

glossaryTitle[76] = 'PCI card';
glossaryText[76] = 'A card designed to fit into a PCI expansion slot in a personal computer. PCI cards provide additional functionality; for example, two types of PCI cards are video adapters and network interface cards. See PCI.';
glossaryImage[76] = '';

glossaryTitle[77] = 'PCI expansion slot';
glossaryText[77] = 'A connection socket designed to accommodate PCI cards.';
glossaryImage[77] = '';

glossaryTitle[78] = 'PCMCIA';
glossaryText[78] = 'Acronym for "Personal Computer Memory Card International Association." A nonprofit organization of manufacturers and vendors formed to promote a common technical standard for PC Card–based peripherals and the slot designed to hold them, primarily on portable computers and intelligent electronic devices.';
glossaryImage[78] = '';

glossaryTitle[79] = 'peer-to-peer network';
glossaryText[79] = 'A network of two or more computers that communicate without using a central server. This lack of reliance on a server differentiates a peer-to-peer network from a client/server network.';
glossaryImage[79] = '';

glossaryTitle[80] = 'PING';
glossaryText[80] = 'A protocol for testing whether a particular computer is connected to the Internet by sending a packet to the computer\'s IP address and waiting for a response.';
glossaryImage[80] = '';

glossaryTitle[81] = 'Plug and Play';
glossaryText[81] = 'A set of specifications that allows a computer to automatically detect and configure various peripheral devices, such as monitors, modems, and printers.';
glossaryImage[81] = '';

glossaryTitle[82] = 'port';
glossaryText[82] = 'A physical connection through which data is transferred between a computer and other devices (such as a monitor, modem, or printer), a network, or another computer. Also, a software channel for network communications.';
glossaryImage[82] = '';

glossaryTitle[83] = 'PPPoE';
glossaryText[83] = 'Acronym for "Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet." A specification for connecting users on an Ethernet network to the Internet by using a broadband connection (typically through a DSL modem). Microsoft Broadband Networking hardware supports PPPoE for connections that require it.';
glossaryImage[83] = '';

glossaryTitle[84] = 'profile';
glossaryText[84] = 'A computer-based record that contains an individual network\'s software settings and identification information.';
glossaryImage[84] = '';

glossaryTitle[85] = 'protocol';
glossaryText[85] = 'A set of rules that computers use to communicate with each other over a network.';
glossaryImage[85] = '';

//R
glossaryTitle[86] = 'resource';
glossaryText[86] = 'Any type of hardware (such as a modem or printer) or software (such as an application, file, or game) that users can share on a network.';
glossaryImage[86] = '';

glossaryTitle[87] = 'restore factory defaults';
glossaryText[87] = 'The term used to describe the process of erasing your base station\'s current settings to restore factory settings. You accomplish this by pressing the Reset button and holding it for five or more seconds. Note that this is different from resetting the base station.';
glossaryImage[87] = '';

glossaryTitle[88] = 'RJ-11 connector';
glossaryText[88] = 'An attachment used to join a telephone line to a device such as a modem or the external telephone lines.';
glossaryImage[88] = '';

glossaryTitle[89] = 'RJ-45 connector';
glossaryText[89] = 'An attachment found on the ends of all Ethernet cables that connects Ethernet (wired) cables to other devices and computers';
glossaryImage[89] = '';

glossaryTitle[90] = 'router';
glossaryText[90] = 'A device (also known as a gateway or base station) that acts as a central point for networked devices, receives transmitted messages, and forwards them. Microsoft Broadband Networking base stations can link many computers on a single network, and can share an encrypted Internet connection with wired and wireless devices.';
glossaryImage[90] = '';

//S
glossaryTitle[91] = 'server';
glossaryText[91] = 'A computer that provides shared resources, such as storage space or processing power, to network users.';
glossaryImage[91] = '';

glossaryTitle[92] = 'shared folder';
glossaryText[92] = 'A folder (on a computer) that has been made available for other people to use on a network.';
glossaryImage[92] = '';

glossaryTitle[93] = 'shared printer';
glossaryText[93] = 'A printer (connected to a computer) that has been made available for other people to use on a network.';
glossaryImage[93] = '';

glossaryTitle[94] = 'sharing';
glossaryText[94] = 'To make the resources associated with one computer available to users of other computers on a network.';
glossaryImage[94] = '';

glossaryTitle[95] = 'SNTP';
glossaryText[95] = 'Acronym for "Simple Network Time Protocol." A protocol that enables client computers to synchronize their clocks with a time server over the Internet.';
glossaryImage[95] = '';

glossaryTitle[96] = 'SSID';
glossaryText[96] = 'Acronym for "Service Set Identifier," also known as a "wireless network name." An SSID value uniquely identifies your network and is case sensitive.';
glossaryImage[96] = '';

glossaryTitle[97] = 'static IP address';
glossaryText[97] = 'A permanent Internet address of a computer (assigned by an ISP).';
glossaryImage[97] = '';

glossaryTitle[98] = 'straight-through cable';
glossaryText[98] = 'A type of cable that facilitates network communications. An ethernet cable comes in a couple of  flavors. there is twisted pair, and coax  ethernet cables. Each of these allow data to travel at 10Mbit per second. Unlike the Crossover cable, straight-through cable has the same order of pin contacts on each end-plug of the cable.';
glossaryImage[98] = '';

glossaryTitle[99] = 'subnet';
glossaryText[99] = 'A distinct network that forms part of a larger computer network. Subnets are connected through routers and can use a shared network address to connect to the Internet.';
glossaryImage[99] = '';

glossaryTitle[100] = 'subnet mask';
glossaryText[100] = 'Typically, a subnet may represent all the machines at one geographic location, in one building, or on the same local area network (LAN). Having an organization\'s network divided into subnets allows it to be connected to the Internet with a single shared network address. Similar in form to an IP address and typically provided by an ISP. An example of a subnet mask value is 255.255.0.0.';
glossaryImage[100] = '';

glossaryTitle[101] = 'switch';
glossaryText[101] = 'A central device that functions similarly to a hub, forwarding packets to specific ports rather than broadcasting every packet to every port. A switch is more efficient when used on a high-volume network.';
glossaryImage[101] = '';

glossaryTitle[102] = 'switched network';
glossaryText[102] = 'A communications network that uses switching to establish a connection between parties.';
glossaryImage[102] = '';

glossaryTitle[103] = 'switching';
glossaryText[103] = 'A communications method that uses temporary rather than permanent connections to establish a link or to route information between two parties. In computer networks, message switching and packet switching allow any two parties to exchange information. Messages are routed (switched) through intermediary stations that together serve to connect the sender and the receiver.';
glossaryImage[103] = '';

//T
glossaryTitle[104] = 'TCP/IP';
glossaryText[104] = 'Acronym for "Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol." A networking protocol that allows computers to communicate across interconnected networks and the Internet. Every computer on the Internet communicates by using TCP/IP.';
glossaryImage[104] = '';

glossaryTitle[105] = 'throughput';
glossaryText[105] = 'The data transfer rate of a network, measured as the number of kilobytes per second transmitted.';
glossaryImage[105] = '';

//U
glossaryTitle[106] = 'USB';
glossaryText[106] = 'Acronym for "universal serial bus." USB (Universal Serial Bus) is a plug-and-play interface between a computer and add-on devices (such as audio players, joysticks, keyboards, telephones, scanners, and printers). With USB, a new device can be added to your computer without having to add an adapter card or even having to turn the computer off.';
glossaryImage[106] = '';

glossaryTitle[107] = 'USB adapter';
glossaryText[107] = 'A device that connects to a USB port; the Microsoft Broadband Networking Wireless USB Adapter is a type of USB adapter.';
glossaryImage[107] = '';

glossaryTitle[108] = 'USB connector';
glossaryText[108] = 'The plug end of the USB cable that is connected to a USB port. It is about half an inch wide, rectangular and somewhat flat.';
glossaryImage[108] = '';

glossaryTitle[109] = 'USB port';
glossaryText[109] = 'A rectangular slot in a computer into which a USB connector is inserted.';
glossaryImage[109] = '';

glossaryTitle[110] = 'UTP';
glossaryText[110] = 'Acronym for "unshielded twisted pair." A cable that contains one or more twisted pairs of wires without additional shielding. It\'s more flexible and takes less space than a shielded twisted pair (STP) cable, but has less bandwidth.';
glossaryImage[110] = '';

//V
glossaryTitle[111] = 'virtual server';
glossaryText[111] = 'One of multiple Web sites running on the same server, each with a unique domain name and IP address.';
glossaryImage[111] = '';

//W
glossaryTitle[112] = 'WAN';
glossaryText[112] = 'Acronym for "wide area network." A geographically widespread network that might include many linked local area networks.';
glossaryImage[112] = '';

glossaryTitle[113] = 'WEP';
glossaryText[113] = 'Acronym for "Wired Equivalent Privacy," also known as "wireless security." A wireless network encryption mechanism that helps to protect data transmitted over wireless networks. If you are operating a wireless network, it is strongly recommended that you enable WEP.';
glossaryImage[113] = '';

glossaryTitle[114] = 'Wi-Fi';
glossaryText[114] = 'A term commonly used to mean the wireless 802.11b standard.';
glossaryImage[114] = '';

glossaryTitle[115] = 'wireless';
glossaryText[115] = 'Refers to technology that connects computers without the use of wires and cables. Microsoft Broadband Networking wireless devices use radio transmission to connect computers on a network to one another. Radio signals can be transmitted through walls, ceilings, and floors, so you can connect computers that are in different rooms in the house without physically attaching them to one another.';
glossaryImage[115] = '';

glossaryTitle[116] = 'wireless access point';
glossaryText[116] = 'A device that exchanges data between wireless computers or between wireless computers and wired computers on a network.';
glossaryImage[116] = '';

glossaryTitle[117] = 'wireless network name';
glossaryText[117] = 'The single name of a grouping of computers that are linked together to form a network.';
glossaryImage[117] = '';

glossaryTitle[118] = 'wireless security';
glossaryText[118] = 'A wireless network encryption mechanism that helps to protect data transmitted over wireless networks. If you are operating a wireless network, it is strongly recommended that you enable WEP.';
glossaryImage[118] = '';

glossaryTitle[119] = 'WLAN';
glossaryText[119] = 'Acronym for "wireless local area network." A network that exclusively relies on wireless technology for device connections.';
glossaryImage[119] = '';

glossaryTitle[120] = 'workgroup';
glossaryText[120] = 'A group of users working on a common project and sharing computer files, typically over a LAN. A user who has a home network that is not being controlled by a domain controller can be a member of a workgroup.';
glossaryImage[120] = '';

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  else if (w == 90)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[90]+ parttwo +glossaryText[90]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 91)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[91]+ parttwo +glossaryText[91]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 92)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[92]+ parttwo +glossaryText[92]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 93)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[93]+ parttwo +glossaryText[93]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 94)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[94]+ parttwo +glossaryText[94]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 95)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[95]+ parttwo +glossaryText[95]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 96)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[96]+ parttwo +glossaryText[96]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 97)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[97]+ parttwo +glossaryText[97]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 98)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[98]+ parttwo +glossaryText[98]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 99)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[99]+ parttwo +glossaryText[99]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  else if (w == 100)win1.document.write(partone +glossaryTitle[100]+ parttwo +glossaryText[100]+ partthree +partfour+ closer);
  }
  

