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EDGE (Enhanced Data GSM Environment), a faster version of the Global System for Mobile (GSM) wireless service, is designed to deliver data at rates up to 384 Kbps and enable the delivery of multimedia and other broadband applications to mobile phone and computer users.
Ãâó: www.pdacortex.com/glossary.htm
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EDGE allows higher data transmission speeds based on the GSM standard. This system is sometimes referred to as ??.5G?? to denote a halfway house between the GPRS-enhanced GSM technology and UMTS. Thanks to improved coding, data rates of up to 48,000 bits per channel are possible with EDGE. The acronym E-GPRS, also frequently used, stands for "Enhanced GPRS" = enhancement of the GPRS standard. When EDGE and GPRS are combined, data rates of up to 384 kilobits per second are possible.
Ãâó: www.swisscom-mobile.ch/scm/wir_glossar-en.aspx
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The edge of a network is where users are directly connected and their data aggregated into the network backbone. This is where user-specific services and policies are enabled such as security, DSL broadband, accounting and quality of service.
Ãâó: newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2004/hd_051904c.html
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is the term applied to the sharpened cutting part of the blade where the two relatively flat faces of the blade intersect at an acute angle to form a variant of the basic tool known as the inclined plane. Most European medieval swords, as well as their predecessors, are symmetrical about the long axis and have two edges which begin at or very near the crossguard and join at point (the distal most tip of the blade). ...
Ãâó: www.vikingsword.com/glossary.html
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An advantage over an opponent.
Ãâó: www.20topcasinos.com/dictionary.htm
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