| V: Abbreviation for Volt. A unit of
electrical force or potential, equal to the
force that will cause a current of one Amp
to flow through a conductor with a resistance
of one Ohm. |
| VAC: Abbreviation
for Volts, AC. Voltage using alternating current. |
| VCSEL: See vertical cavity surface-emitting
laser. |
| VDC: Abbreviation
for Volts, DC. Voltage using direct current. |
| VDSL: Abbreviation for very high data rate digital
subscriber line. A DSL operating at a data
rate higher than that of HDSL. See also DSL. |
Vector Quantization (VQ): A digital video compression technique
based on Shannon’s distortion-rate theory
which states that the performance of data
compression systems improves if blocks of
data are coded, with larger coded data blocks
giving better performance. |
| Vertical Cavity Surface-emitting
Laser: Lasers that emit light perpendicular
to the plane of the wafer they are grown on.
They have very small dimensions compared to
conventional lasers and are very efficient. |
 |
| Vestigial-sideband (VSB) Transmission: A modified double-sideband transmission
in which one sideband, the carrier, and only
a portion of the other sideband are transmitted.
See also sideband. |
| VGA: Abbreviation for video graphics array.
A high-resolution color standard for computer
monitors. |
| VHF: Abbreviation for very high frequency. The
frequencies, ranging from 30 MHz to 300 MHz,
in the electromagnetic
spectrum. Contains off-air television
channels 2-12. |
| Video
on Demand (VOD): A term used
for interactive or customized video delivery
service. |
| Videoconferencing: Conducting conferences via a video telecommunications
system. |
 |
| Videophone: A telephone-like
service with a picture as well as sound. |
Virtual Circuit (VC): A communications
arrangement in which data from a source
user may be passed to a destination user
over various real circuit configurations
during a single period of communication,
usually on a per call basis, although permanent
connections can be established. |
| Visible
Light: Electromagnetic
radiation visible to the human eye; wavelengths
of 400-700 nm. |
| VOD: See video on demand. |
| Voice
Circuit: A circuit capable of
carrying one telephone conversation or its
equivalent; the standard sub-unit in which
telecommunication capacity is counted. The
U.S. analog equivalent is 4 kHz. The digital
equivalent is 64 kbit/s in North America and
in Europe. |
| VPN: Abbreviation for virtual private network.
A protected information-system link utilizing
tunneling, security controls, and end-point
address translation giving the end user the
impression that a dedicated line exists between
nodes. |
| VSB: See vestigial-sideband transmission. |