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JANUS? 2020 Hand-Held Computer (4MB) - Intermec

JANUS? 2020 Hand-Held Computer (4MB) - Intermec

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Glossary<br />

G<br />

Graphics mode<br />

One of two display modes on the reader. When the reader is set to use<br />

Graphics mode, you see a 128 x 160 pixel display size. You can use the reader’s<br />

CGA display as a viewport to move around and see a 200 x 640 pixel virtual<br />

display. Contrast with Text mode.<br />

handshake event<br />

A communications event that signifies the completion of a data block<br />

transmission. The exchange signifies either an affirmative acknowledge (AFF)<br />

or a negative acknowledge (NEG). The handshake event is enabled by defining<br />

the AFF character to be other than NULL. Some computers use the characters<br />

XON and XOFF as handshaking characters.<br />

HIBC<br />

Health Industry Bar Code standard. A modified version of Code 39 that has 43<br />

characters, uses the Modulus 43 check character, and reserves some character<br />

combinations for special usage.<br />

high memory area (HMA)<br />

HMA is a 64K block of memory, starting 16 bytes below the 1024K mark, and is<br />

the first 64K of extended memory. Since HMA can only hold one item, the first<br />

program that requests HMA uses it, regardless of the size of the program.<br />

home<br />

The viewport’s home position is the upper left corner of the reader’s virtual<br />

display.<br />

horizontal reading angle<br />

The horizontal angle of a reader’s laser scanner to a bar code label. The<br />

optimum horizontal reading angle is near zero degrees.<br />

host computer<br />

A PC or other computer connected to the <strong>JANUS</strong> reader. Also called the host.<br />

human-readable<br />

A character printed in a font that can be read by a human, as opposed to bar<br />

code symbology that can only be read by a machine.<br />

image file<br />

An image file contains all the files you want to load onto the reader’s ROM<br />

drives. Because ROM drives are implemented in flash memory, you can use<br />

DOS commands to read from drive C or D, but you must use special utilities to<br />

write to drive to them.<br />

G-13

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