Wake-on-Ring (WOR) or Wake-on-Modem (WOM) is a specification that allows supported computers and devices to "wake up" or turn on from a sleeping, hibernating or "soft off" state (e.g. ACPI state G1 or G2), and begin operation.
The basic premise is that a special signal is sent over phone lines to the computer through its dial-up modem, telling it to fully power-on and begin operation. Common uses were archive databases and BBSes, although hobbyist use was significant.
Fax machines use a similar system, in which they are mostly idle until receiving an incoming fax signal, which spurs operation.
This style of remote operation has mostly been supplanted by Wake-on-LAN, which is newer but works in much the same way.
See also
Additional resources
Firmware and booting | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Processes | |||||||
Booting firmware |
| ||||||
Hybrid firmware bootloader | |||||||
Bootloaders |
| ||||||
Partition layouts | |||||||
Partitions | |||||||
Utilities |
| ||||||
Network boot | |||||||
ROM variants | |||||||
Related |
This computing article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |