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CallManager and signaling
SCCP is a lightweight protocol for session signaling with Cisco Unified Communications Manager ( formerly called CallManager ).
CallManager often utilizes the Skinny Client Control Protocol ( SCCP ) as a communications protocol for signaling the hardware endpoints of the system, such as IP Phones.

CallManager and for
As a remnant of the Selsius origin of the current Cisco IP phones, the default device name format for registered Cisco phones with CallManager is SEP -- as in Selsius Ethernet Phone -- followed by the MAC address.
Cisco Unified CallManager 5. 0 is Linux based ( Cisco VOS ) and for the first time can use Session Initiation Protocol ( SIP ) to IP end-points ; apart from the addition of SIP it is feature compatible with CallManager 4. 1 ( 3 ).
) and comes with a ' starter ' license for a single node and 50 device weights ( about 10 phones ), and will install natively on VMWare for lab purposes ; in addition it requires a ' feature license ' to activate the CallManager feature.
Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express ( CUCME ), formerly Cisco Unified CallManager Express and Cisco CallManager Express, is a Cisco IOS based IP-PBX for small medium business, enterprise branch office and commercial customers.

CallManager and call
Cisco Unified CallManager 4. 2 runs on Windows 2000 and includes new PABX features over 4. 1 ( 3 ) ( namely logging into hunt groups and call-forward on no coverage ( so, if you forward a line to a hunt group, and the hunt group is unavailable or busy, you can forward calls somewhere else ); Also introduced was Call Forward Unregistered, so that if you called a remote site, but the WAN link was down, you could automatically forward that call to the PSTN.

CallManager and H
* Unified Comms adds features like CallManager Express, Gatekeeper, H. 323, IP SLAs, MGCP, SIP, VoIP.

CallManager and .
Skinny is a proprietary signalling protocol provided by Cisco's CallManager.
Cisco Unified Communications Manager ( CUCM ), formerly Cisco Unified CallManager and Cisco CallManager ( CCM ), is a software-based call-processing system developed by Cisco Systems.
CallManager underwent a large design and engineering effort to enable scalability and redundancy to the software.
This CallManager release was built off of the 3. 0 release.
In 2004 Cisco made a large scale release with CallManager 4. 0.
This version ( as well as all Windows 2000-based versions of CallManager ( 4. 0, 4. 1 and 4. 2 ) are End of Life ( announcement was made November 15, 2007, with an End of Sale date of May, 2008 )).
CallManager 4. 1 also enhances the encryption capabilities first introduced in CallManager 4. 0.
CallManager 4. 2 was released in parallel with CallManager 5. 0 on 6 March 2006.

CallManager and ),
* Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express ( CUCME ), formerly CallManager Express ( CME ), a telephony system

acts and signaling
The IGF-2 receptor only binds IGF-2 and acts as a " clearance receptor "— it activates no intracellular signaling pathways, functioning only as an IGF-2 sequestering agent and preventing IGF-2 signaling.
Somewhat naive concerning the complex power struggle between the papacy and the empire, Lothair also consented to several symbolic acts that were subsequently interpreted by Rome as signaling acceptance of papal confirmation of his position.
According to signaling theory, education does not lead to increased human capital, but rather acts as a mechanism by which workers with superior innate abilities can signal those abilities to prospective employers and so gain above average wages.
This increases serotonin signaling, which then acts to elevate mood and thus relieve depressive symptoms.
For the first time, many of the label's acts began frequently recording at outside studios ( such as Ardent Studios in Memphis and at recording studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama ) and working with outside producers, signaling an end of the signature Stax sound.
Vitronectin is another protein that is induced by Shh and it acts as an obligate co-factor for Shh signaling in the neural tube.
Instead, PCV cells have a mutation in the tyrosine kinase ( JAK2 ), which acts in signaling pathways of the EPO-receptor, rendering those cells hypersensitive to EPO.
* PA acts as a signaling lipid, recruiting cytosolic proteins to appropriate membranes ( e. g., sphingosine kinase 1 ).
This raises the question as to whether PA has any direct role in signaling or whether it simply acts as a precursor for DAG production.
In developmental biology, the term is rigorously used to mean a signaling molecule that acts directly on cells ( not through serial induction ) to produce specific cellular responses dependent on morphogen concentration.
β-catenin acts by anchoring the actin cytoskeleton to the junctions, and may possibly aid in contact inhibition signaling within the cell.
Currently, the means by which ceramide acts as a signaling molecule are not clear.

acts and proxy
The system receives requests from users for downloading web pages, so the crawler acts in part as a smart proxy server.
In computer networks, a proxy server is a server ( a computer system or an application ) that acts as an intermediary for requests from clients seeking resources from other servers.
Area 51 is in Lincoln County, and the county sheriff acts in proxy for the perimeter security forces.
Being a symbol of the power and authority of a legislative assembly, a precedent was set in 2002 as to the severity of acts of disrespect toward the mace in Canada and, by proxy, the monarch.
* Xdmx ( Distributed Multihead X Project ), a X Window server that acts as a proxy to other distant X servers
A shortcut ( a link to a file that acts as a redirecting proxy, not the actual file ) and hypertext have no real-world equivalent.
While a forward proxy acts as an intermediary for its ( usually nearby ) associated client ( s ) and returns to them resources accessible on the Internet, a reverse proxy acts as an intermediary for its ( usually nearby ) associated server ( s ) and only returns resources provided by those associated server ( s ).
They describe an object that acts as a proxy for a result that is initially unknown, usually because the computation of its value is yet incomplete.
A cold war or cold warfare is a state of conflict between nations that does not involve direct military action but is pursued primarily through economic and political actions, propaganda, acts of espionage or proxy wars waged by surrogates.

acts and for
The decision maker who acts for the community as a whole must decide whether the objectives pursued and the methods used are appropriate to public policy regarding cultural groups.
That fall he submitted to Professor Baker the first acts and outlines of the following acts of several plays, six of them, according to some of his associates, and he also worked on a play that he first called Niggertown, the material for which he had collected during the summer at home.
The Department of Defense appropriation acts for the past several years have contained a rider which limits competitive bidding by firms in other countries on certain military supply items.
At the present time we do not know by what biochemical mechanism TSH acts on the thyroid, but for bio-assay of the hormone there are a number of properties by which its activity may be estimated, including release of iodine from the thyroid, increase in thyroid weight, increase in mean height of the follicular cells and increase in the thyroidal uptake of Af.
The feeling of individual inferiority, defeat, or humilation growing out of various social situations or individual deficiencies or failures is compensated for by communion in worship or prayer with a friendly, but all-victorious Father-God, as well as by sympathetic fellowship with others who share this faith, and by opportunities in religious acts for giving vent to emotions and energies.
As such it acts as an anchor for the people.
Confused and divided though this tradition may be, it is an important part of the social and cultural heritage of the group, and acts as a means of socialization, particularly for members of the rural community.
One of his initial acts in office was to appoint Philip Coombs of the Ford Foundation as the first Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs.
She had been sentenced to 180 years in prison, but former Gov. Stratton commuted her term to 75 years, making her eligible for parole, as one of his last acts in office.
His bill, allegedly aimed at Hoffa, would amend the Sherman, Clayton and Norris-LaGuardia acts to authorize the issuance of federal injunctions in any transportation strike and would make it illegal for any union to act in concert with any other union -- even a sister local in the same international.
Only in its final scene, where Beatie Bryant ( Mary Doyle ) shakes off the disappointment of being jilted by her intellectual lover and proclaims her emancipation do we get much which makes worthwhile the series of boorish rustic happenings we have had to watch for most of the first two and one-half acts.
This need not imply that on average 50 % or more of altruistic acts were beneficial for the altruist in the ancestral environment ; if the benefits from helping the right person were very high it would be beneficial to err on the side of caution and usually be altruistic even if in most cases there were no benefits.
Although they " were expecting to see activity in the brain's reward centers ", based on the idea that " people perform altruistic acts because they feel good about it ", what they found was that " another part of the brain was also involved, and it was quite sensitive to the difference between doing something for personal gain and doing it for someone else's gain ".
Additionally, while generous acts make people feel good about themselves, it is also important for people to appreciate the kindness they receive from others.
The iodine acts as a carrier, ensuring that there is sufficient material for laboratory techniques ( such as filtration and precipitation ) to work.
One of his first acts as Emperor was to persuade the Senate to grant divine honours to Hadrian, which they had at first refused ; his efforts to persuade the Senate to grant these honours is the most likely reason given for his title of Pius ( dutiful in affection ; compare pietas ).
Parsons had already acted as assistant engineer on The Beatles ' Abbey Road and Let It Be, had recently engineered Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon, and had produced several acts for EMI Records.
The category of acts constituting hubris for the ancient Greeks apparently broadened from the original specific reference to mutilation of a corpse, or a humiliation of a defeated foe, or irreverent, " outrageous treatment ", in general.
Over Grant's objection, Johnson removed generals Sheridan and Sickles for failing to follow his earlier orders to circumvent the Reconstruction acts.
Now, suppose there is a program in the language L < sub > 1 </ sub > which acts as an interpreter for L < sub > 2 </ sub >:
She was best known for ordering her male servants to be crippled " as the lame best perform the acts of love ".
However, the people did not interpret the acts this way, and the discipline turned into judgment for the people's disobedience.

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