APC NetBotz 320 Rack Appliance NBRK0320E Manual De Usuario
Los códigos de productos
NBRK0320E
Advanced View: Monitoring Appliances
Using Your Appliance
45
Image Zooming
You can use the Advanced View to select and zoom in on an area of the camera image. Simply click and
drag in the camera image to select the area that you want to view. Then, right-click on the camera image
and select Zoom in. The full camera image is then replaced with only the portion of the frame that you
selected. Once you have zoomed in on an image, you can return to the full camera image by right-clicking
on the zoomed image and selecting Zoom out.
drag in the camera image to select the area that you want to view. Then, right-click on the camera image
and select Zoom in. The full camera image is then replaced with only the portion of the frame that you
selected. Once you have zoomed in on an image, you can return to the full camera image by right-clicking
on the zoomed image and selecting Zoom out.
The camera image is a standard 4:3 ratio image. However, if you select an area that does not closely
match this standard 4:3 the resulting zoomed image can be significantly distorted. To avoid these
distortions in your zoomed images, right-click on the camera image and select Maintain aspect ratio.
With this option enabled you will automatically select areas of the camera image that conform to the 4:3
ratio, thereby minimizing distortion in the zoomed image.
match this standard 4:3 the resulting zoomed image can be significantly distorted. To avoid these
distortions in your zoomed images, right-click on the camera image and select Maintain aspect ratio.
With this option enabled you will automatically select areas of the camera image that conform to the 4:3
ratio, thereby minimizing distortion in the zoomed image.
Recording Camera Images
You can use the Advanced View to record camera images and save them to a user-specified directory. By
default, recorded camera images are saved to a subdirectory with the same name as the Camera Pod,
located within a directory named camera in your Home directory. For example, a user account named
NetBotz on a Windows XP system recording images from a Camera Pod labeled “My Camera” would, by
default, store recorded images in the directory C:\Documents and Settings\NetBotz\My
Camera
default, recorded camera images are saved to a subdirectory with the same name as the Camera Pod,
located within a directory named camera in your Home directory. For example, a user account named
NetBotz on a Windows XP system recording images from a Camera Pod labeled “My Camera” would, by
default, store recorded images in the directory C:\Documents and Settings\NetBotz\My
Camera
. Images are stored as JPG files, and are named “imagexxx.jpg” by default, where xxx is a picture
count number that is automatically incremented as images are captured and saved.
You can use the Camera Preferences settings to specify camera recording settings. To open Camera
Preferences, right-click in the camera image and then select Preferences. Using this interface you can
specify the filename format to be used when recording camera images, and can also specify a maximum
number of pictures and/or maximum amount of disk space used to store recorded images on your system.
Preferences, right-click in the camera image and then select Preferences. Using this interface you can
specify the filename format to be used when recording camera images, and can also specify a maximum
number of pictures and/or maximum amount of disk space used to store recorded images on your system.
Note
• CCTV Adapter Pod 120s support only 160x120, 320x240, and 640x480.
Resolutions higher than 640x480 are available only from Camera Pod 120s.
• Actual frame rate available from image processor depends on the resolution
and image quality of generated images. Maximum framerate of 30 frames per
second is available only at Normal Quality or lower and only at resolutions up
to 640x480. Maximum frame rate for 800x600, 1024x768, and 1280x1024 at
Normal Quality or lower is 10 frames per second. If you configure the Camera
Pod 120 to capture images in High Quality, the Maximum Frame Rate for
some resolutions changes: At 640x480 and lower resolution the maximum
frame rate drops from 30 frames per second to 20 frames per second. In
800x600 the maximum frame rate is unchanged (stays at 10 frames per
second). In 1024x768 and 1280x1024 the maximum frame rate drops from 10
frames per second to 8 frames per second. Also, the maximum frame rate
describes the maximum number of images that the camera imager is capable
of producing each second. The actual frame rate that will be visible in the
Basic View or Advanced View is largely dependent on the amount of
available bandwidth. Advanced View is largely dependent on the amount of
available bandwidth.
second is available only at Normal Quality or lower and only at resolutions up
to 640x480. Maximum frame rate for 800x600, 1024x768, and 1280x1024 at
Normal Quality or lower is 10 frames per second. If you configure the Camera
Pod 120 to capture images in High Quality, the Maximum Frame Rate for
some resolutions changes: At 640x480 and lower resolution the maximum
frame rate drops from 30 frames per second to 20 frames per second. In
800x600 the maximum frame rate is unchanged (stays at 10 frames per
second). In 1024x768 and 1280x1024 the maximum frame rate drops from 10
frames per second to 8 frames per second. Also, the maximum frame rate
describes the maximum number of images that the camera imager is capable
of producing each second. The actual frame rate that will be visible in the
Basic View or Advanced View is largely dependent on the amount of
available bandwidth. Advanced View is largely dependent on the amount of
available bandwidth.