Avocent SPC420 User Manual

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Using the Video Viewer
The Video Viewer is used to conduct a KVM session with one or more target devices attached to 
one or more KVM switches. You may optionally use KVM session profiles to control session 
behavior on target devices. When you connect to a device using the Video Viewer, the target device 
desktop appears in a separate window. The Video Viewer window supports either a 3 or 5 button 
mouse.
Virtual media sessions, which are supported on certain KVM switches, are opened from the Video 
Viewer.
About the Video Viewer
The DS View 3 management software uses either a Java-based program or an ActiveX applet to 
display the Video Viewer window. The Java-based Video Viewer is launched from the Mozilla and 
Firefox based clients when a KVM session is requested. The ActiveX Video Viewer is launched 
from Internet Explorer on Windows.
KVM sessions may be launched to devices from any supported KVM switch. Each KVM session 
will be established using the configured encryption level. See Managed Appliance Session Settings 
on page 171.
To launch a KVM session, a user must have been assigned rights or belong to a user group which 
has been assigned rights to establish a KVM session. See About Access Rights on page 144.
The DSView 3 software uses system memory to store and display images within Video Viewer 
windows. Each opened Video Viewer window requires additional system memory. An 8-bit color 
setting on the client PC requires 1.4 MB of memory per Video Viewer window, a 16-bit color 
setting requires 2.4 MB and a 32-bit color setting requires 6.8 MB. Opening more than four 
simultaneous Video Viewer windows may affect system performance and is not recommended. If 
you attempt to open more Video Viewer windows than your system memory allows, you will 
receive an out of memory error and the requested Video Viewer window will not open.
When using a non-proxied connection, video performance over a slower network connection may 
be less than optimal. Since certain color settings use less network bandwidth than others, changing 
the color settings may increase video performance. For optimal video performance over a slower 
network connection, a color setting such as Grayscale/Best Compression or Low Color/High 
Compression is recommended. See Color depth on page 258.