(Network Address Translation) The translation of an Internet Protocol address (IP address) used within one network to a different IP address known within another network One network is designated the internal network and the other is the external The internal network then appears as one entity to the outside world In the case of HomeLAN, the NAT capability of the Internet sharing software allows the sharing of one Internet connection among all the PCs connected to the home network
A scheme that transforms network packets at a gateway so network addresses that are valid on one side of the gateway are translated into addresses that are valid on the other side
Software gateway function that translates internal private IP addresses and globally unique Internet addresses
NAT is a network capability that enables a houseful of computers to dynamically share a single incoming IP address from a dial-up, cable or DSL connection NAT takes the single incoming IP address and creates a new IP address for each client computer on the network
Network Address Translation A protocol used to provide a mapping between internal IP addresses and external or public IP addresses
Network Address Translation is an Internet standard that enables local area networks (LAN) to use one set of IP addresses for internal traffic and a second set of addresses for external traffic
Network address translation: the translation of an Internet Protocol address used within one network to a different IP address known within another network For instance, a DSL router has two NIC cards The external card will have a LISCO (public) IP address The internal card (connected to your LAN) will have an internal IP address The router will do NAT to route traffic to the correct computer in your LAN
1 Network Address Translation - translates multiple IP addresses on a private LAN to one public address used on the Internet
A service used by routers/servers to connect one subnet to another For example: A router with a single public IP address uses NAT to route a private subnet to and from the Internet
Network Address Translation Changes the IP addresses in packets on the fly, recording the mapping between original and replacement addresses Used to convert your local LAN addresses, private to you, to the address by which the Internet knows you
NAT (Network Address Translation) is the translation of an Internet Protocol address (IP address) used within one network to a different IP address known within another network One network is designated the inside network and the other is the outside Typically, a company maps its local inside network addresses to one or more global outside IP addresses and unmaps the global IP addresses on incoming packets back into local IP addresses
Network Address Translation (NAT) is used on devices such as firewalls and certain load balancers to allow clients to request information of a public IP address (assigned to a web site, for example) for which the information is actually located on servers with non-legitimate addresses (such as a group of web servers in a farm located behind the firewall or load balancer
Network Address Translation - A program or piece of hardware that converts the IP address from a private address to a public address real time This allows multiple users to share a single public IP address It also prevents access to these users from the outside without special configurations NAT is used in home networks and corporations to allow multiple PCs to access the internet via T-1, ADSL, SDSL or Cable Modem
Acronym for Network Address Translation, a system included with many routers and some operation systems where many hosts "behind" the router, or firewall host are translated to a single real IP address Fundamentally, NAT is great for any use where the inside client opens a connection out to a remote site (web browsing), or where the two ends rendevous on a selected, random port (IRC's CTCP, FTP), but problematic where a specific port is used and more than one of the translated machines need to accept new connections in from outside, such as in web serving, online games, and other servers
Network Address Translation The ability to use one set of IP addresses for internal traffic and another set for external (or public) traffic This can allow, for example, one public IP address to sit on a router and offer various public services to workstations on the internal LAN (web server, mail server, ftp server) which have private IP addresses that are not visible to the public, while at the same time, the rest of the LAN can access the internet with their own various private IP address schemes
The translation of an Internet Protocol address (IP address) used within one network to a different IP address known within another network One network is designated the internal network and the other is the external The internal network then appears as one entity to the outside world In the case of wireless LANs with an outside Internet connection, the NAT capability of Internet sharing software allows the sharing of one Internet connection among all the wireless PCs connected
Network Address Translation A generic description of the process whereby the IP address of a host on a private internet is translated into an IANA-assigned unique address on the wider Public Internet This can be accomplished by several techniques: masquerading, circuit-level gateways such as SOCKS, transparent proxying or application-level gateways
Network Address Translation is the translation of an Internet Protocol address (IP address) used within one network to a different IP address known within another network One network is designated the inside network and the other is the outside Typically, a company maps its local inside network addresses to one or more global outside IP addresses and unmaps the global IP addresses on incoming packets back into local IP addresses This helps ensure security since each outgoing or incoming request must go through a translation process that also offers the opportunity to qualify or authenticate the request or match it to a previous request NAT also conserves on the number of global IP addresses that a company needs and it lets the company use a single IP address in its communication with the world
Network Address Translation Used by a Firewall or Gateway to hide LAN IP addressing from devices on the WAN
Network Address Translation Changes IP addresses in packets and edits needed IP header information "on the fly " Records the mapping between original and replacement addresses
Network Address Translation A method for translating internal IP addresses or network addresses into a single globally unique IP address It permits a nearly unlimited number of users of one class C Network address because global addresses are required only when a user is connected to the Internet It also serves as a fire wall by keeping individual IP addresses hid-den from the outside world NAT is configured by defining address pools and specifying whether a port is "Inside" or "Outside" Also see IP
a US singer famous for his soft, smooth voice, and for his recordings of love songs such as When I Fall in Love, Unforgettable, and Mona Lisa (1917-65). orig. Nathaniel Adams Coles born March 17, 1917, Montgomery, Ala., U.S. died Feb. 15, 1965, Santa Monica, Calif. U.S. jazz pianist and singer. Cole grew up in Chicago and formed a trio in Los Angeles (1939), establishing himself as a major jazz piano stylist. Commercial success, however, came with his singing. His warm, relaxed voice brought a personal touch to the ballads and light swing in which he specialized. "Mona Lisa" and "Unforgettable" were among his major hits of the 1950s. He excelled as a stage personality, and he was also a capable film actor
a US slave who organized a successful revolt (=an attack against people in authority) against Southern slave owners in 1831. He was caught and later hanged for his actions (1800-31). born Oct. 2, 1800, Southampton county, Va., U.S. died Nov. 11, 1831, Jerusalem, Va. U.S. insurrectionist. Born into slavery, he became convinced of his mission to lead American slaves out of bondage and developed a scheme to capture the armoury at Jerusalem, Va. He took an eclipse of the sun as a sign to act (1831) and began his insurrection by killing his master's family. He led 75 slaves as they killed about 60 whites on a two-day march to Jerusalem. About 3,000 state militia and local whites defeated the insurrectionists, who were captured or killed. Turner eluded arrest for six weeks but was found, tried, and hanged. Alarmed by the uprising, Southern states passed legislation forbidding the education, movement, or assembly of slaves
a one-day cricket competition in the UK, in which any team that loses a game leaves the competition, so that in the end there is a final game between the two remaining teams