Analog Display Services Interface. A protocol that allows text messages generated by a remote computer or central office switch to be displayed on a user's telephone or TV set.
Analog Display Services Interface (Telecom) Standard for (few) data transfer on analog network.
Active Directory Service Interfaces. A directory service model and a set of Component Object Model (COM) interfaces. ADSI enables Windows applications and Active Directory clients to access several network directory services, including Active Directory. ADSI is supplied as a software development kit (SDK). Also see Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI).
See Active Directory Service Interface.
Active Directory Services Interfaces. A set of specifications of COM objects and interfaces. Administrators and ISVs can use the ADSI objects to perform common administrative operations, such as adding new users or managing a print queue.
Active Directory Services Interfaces. A set of COM interfaces that wrap LDAP API to make it easier to use. ADSI is available for C/C++, VB, and VBScript users. ADSI is used to retrieve and modify contents of LDAP-compatible directories such as Windows 2000 Active Directory and Exchange 5.5 directory.
Active Directory Service Interfaces. A COM-based directory service model that allows ADSI-compliant client applications to access a wide variety of distinct directory protocols, including Windows Directory Services and Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), while using a single, standard set of interfaces. ADSI shields the client application from the implementation and operational details of the underlying data store or protocol.
Active Directory Service Interfaces. A directory service model and a set of Component Object Model (COM) interfaces. ADSI enables Windows applications and Active Directory clients to access several network directory services, including Active Directory. ADSI is supplied as a software development kit (SDK). See also Active Directory; Component Object Model (COM); directory service.
See definition for Active Directory Service Interfaces (ADSI).
A service allowing voice mail to be viewed on your PC screen. Instead of pressing number keys on the telephone to access voice mail functions, you can use your PC to view and control incoming voice mail. A special communications server on the network handles the incoming voice mail.
Active Directory Service Interfaces. A client-side product based on Component Object Model (COM). ADSI defines a directory service model and a set of COM interfaces that enable Windows 2000, Windows NT, Windows 98, and Windows 95 client applications to access several network directory services, including Active Directory. ADSI allow applications to communicate with Active Directory.
Analog Display Services Interface. A Bellcore standard defining a protocol on the flow of information between a switch, a server, a voice mail system, a service bureau, or a similar device and a subscriber's telephone, PC, data terminal, or other communicating device with a screen. The idea of ADSI is to add words to a system that usually only uses touch tones. In a typical voice mail system, you call up and hear choices: "to listen to new messages, press 1, to hear saved messages, press 2," etc. ADSI is designed to display the choices you're hearing on a screen attached to your phone. Your response is the same: a touch tone button. ADSI's signaling is DTMF and standard Bell 202 modem signals from the service to your 202-modem equipped phone. From the phone to the service it's only touch tone. ADSI works on every phone line in the world.
Analogue Display Services Interface
ADSI - See definition for: Active Directory Service Interfaces
Analog Display Services Interface - Adaptation Box In the VISTEL: project context it is a specific box (hardware and software) developed to assure the management of the interworking between the screenphone terminal P100 and the annexes devices.
Active Directory Service Interfaces. An API to simplify accessing AD objects.
Active Directory Services Interface. Provides a programmatic interface into Windows, allowing scripts to configure IIS, Windows user accounts etc. Microsoft