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Encyclopedia > Asynchronous Balanced Mode

Asynchronous Balanced Mode (ABM) means a communication mode of HDLC and derivative protocols, supporting peer-oriented point-to-point communications between two nodes, where either node can initiate transmission.


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References

This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.


  Results from FactBites:
 
ABM - Asynchronous Balanced Mode (355 words)
Asynchronous Balanced Mode (network) A communication mode used in HDLC and derivative protocols that allows either of two workstations in a peer-oriented point-to-point configuration to initiate a data transfer.
ABM is one of three types of data transfer modes in the HDLC family of protocols: Normal Response Mode (NRM).
The ABM missiles were targeted at incoming missiles.
Gcom - SNA, X.25, Bisync, Frame Relay, LAPB, LAPD, HDLC, SDLC protocol solutions | Gcom glossary (8032 words)
Asynchronous data transmission is the method used by most modems in computers today.
Asynchronous communication can utilize at most 80% of the line bandwidth due to the 2 bits out of 10 overhead for the start and stop bits.
The serial chip usually has modes of operation in which it recognizes basic framing characteristics of the data such as start and stop bits in asynchronous mode and flags and zero insertion in bit oriented synchronous mode.
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