According to manual you will continue receiving faxes after machine finishes copying or sending. It does have dual access capability.
Serial ports only allow one device to send and one device to receive at a time, where a parallel port can send and receive data at the same time.
full-duplex
Duplex is the ability to send and receive data on a network and over the internet at the same time. You can also get Half-Duplex, which is the ability to both send and receive data, but only one at a time. :D
Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).
sequencing
Your question is unclear. If you have a single phone line, it can only be used for one thing at a time... you can talk on the phone, or send/receive fax data, not both (if you have "call waiting", switching from the fax to a call will disrupt the fax). If you have multiple lines, it depends on your fax machine, but in most cases you still wouldn't be able to send or receive a fax and talk on the phone at the same time. However, if you have a combination fax machine/phone, usually you CAN pick up the handset if a voice call comes in, even if the machine is set to default to fax mode.
Half duplex is mode of communication in which both can send data but only one can receive at a time. Full duplex is mode of communication in which both can send and receive data at a same time.
Phone is to call, send and receive message. Fax is to send and receive sensitive file.Internet can be a phone and a fax or both at the same time. Internet can deliver and receive messages anywhere and anytime as long as internet is present.
In full duplex, a device can send and receive data at the same time. In half duplex, it can only communicate one way at a time.
The ability to send and receive transmissions simultaneously on an Ethernet cable is referred to as "full duplex." In full duplex mode, data can be transmitted in both directions at the same time, improving network efficiency and performance compared to half duplex, where data transmission can only occur in one direction at a time.
Simplex communication is one way only. One host transmits, one receives, but they can't do both. A radio is an example. You can receive a signal but you can't send a reply. Half-duplex is two-way, but you can't transmit and receive at the same time. A walkie-talkie ir CB radio is an example. Full duplex is two-way, and you can send and receive at the same time. A telephone is full duplex. You are sending (talking) and receiving (listening and hearing) at the same time.
Can we ensure the same degree of security in a time-shared machine as we have in a dedicated machine?