BioProtocol Internet project initiated in early 1992 as BRNI, bio.com includes PCR, hybridization and microarray protocols.
Molecular Biology Protocols Resources such as polymerase chain reaction, dedicated to method development. Part of internet directory maintained by Horizon Scientific Press, Wymondham, England.
The Internet Protocol (IP) is a data-oriented protocol used by source and destination hosts for communicating data across a packet-switched internetwork.
Data in an IP internetwork are sent in blocks referred to as packets or datagrams (the terms are basically synonymous in IP). In particular, in IP no setup is needed before a host tries to send packets to a host it has previously not communicated with.
Internet Protocol Suite Commonly, the top three layers of the OSI model (Application, Presentation and Session) are considered as a single Application Layer in the TCP/IP suite. Because the TCP/IP suite has no unified session layer on which higher layers are built, these functions are typically carried out (or ignored) by individual applications. The most notable difference between TCP/IP and OSI models is the Application layer, as TCP/IP integrates a few steps of the OSI model into its Application layer. A simplified TCP/IP interpretation of the stack is shown below:
Internet Protocol Spoofing In computer networking, the term Internet Protocol spoofing (IP spoofing) is the creation of IP packets with a forged (spoofed) source IP address.
Serial Line Internet Protocol The Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP) is a mostly obsolete encapsulation of the Internet Protocol designed to work over serial ports and modem connections. It is documented in RFC 1055. On PCs, SLIP has been largely replaced by the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), which is better engineered, has more features and does not require its IP address configuration to be set before it is established. On microcontrollers, however, SLIP is still the preferred way of encapsulating IP packets due to its very small overhead.
Realm-Specific Internet Protocol Realm-Specific Internet Protocol is an IP address translation technique that is an alternative to NAT. RSIP lets an enterprise possess many private addresses behind a single public internet address.
Wireless Internet Protocol Wireless Internet Protocols is a broad term used to describe the suite of wireless protocols post WAP 2.0. It includes XHTML Basic, Nokia's XHTML Mobile Profile, and future developments of WAP by the Open Mobile Alliance.
Wireless Internet Protocols are able to deliver XHTML pages to appropriate wireless devices without the need for WEB to WAP proxys.