Cisco Cisco TelePresence MX700 Manuale Di Manutenzione

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D15119.06 MX700 and MX800 Administrator Guide TC7.3, OCTOBER 2015.  
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Cisco TelePresence MX700 and MX800 
Administrator Guide
Video Input Connector [1..5] OptimalDefinition Profile
This setting will only take effect if the corresponding Video Input Connector Quality setting is 
set to Motion. 
The optimal definition profile reflects the lighting conditions in the video conferencing room and 
the quality of the camera. The better lighting conditions and the better quality of the camera, 
the higher the profile. In good lighting conditions, the video encoder will provide better quality 
(higher resolution or frame rate) for a given call rate. Generally, the Normal or Medium profiles 
are recommended. However, when the lighting conditions are very good, the High profile can 
be set in order to increase the resolution for a given call rate.
Some typical resolutions used for different optimal definition profiles, call rates and transmit 
frame rates are shown in the table below. The resolution must be supported by both the calling 
and called systems. Use the Video Input Source OptimalDefinition Threshold60fps setting to 
decide when to use the 60 fps frame rate.
.
Requires user role: ADMIN
Value space: <Normal/Medium/High>
Normal: Use this profile for a normally to poorly lit environment. Resolutions will be set rather 
conservative.
Medium: Requires good and stable lighting conditions and a good quality video input. For 
some call rates this leads to higher resolution.
High: Requires nearly optimal video conferencing lighting conditions and a good quality video 
input in order to achieve a good overall experience. Rather high resolutions will be used.
Example:
 Video Input Connector 1 OptimalDefinition Profile: Medium
Video Input Connector [1..5] OptimalDefinition Threshold60fps
For each video input, this setting tells the system the lowest resolution where it should transmit 
60fps. So for all resolutions lower than this, the maximum transmitted frame rate would be 
30fps, while above this resolution 60fps would also be possible, if the available bandwidth is 
adequate.
Requires user role: ADMIN
Value space: <512_288/768_448/1024_576/1280_720/1920_1080/Never>
512_288: Set the threshold to 512x288.
768_448: Set the threshold to 768x448.
1024_576: Set the threshold to 1024x576.
1280_720: Set the threshold to 1280x720.
1920_1080: Set the threshold to 1920x1080.
Never: Do not set a threshold for transmitting 60fps.
Example:
 Video Input Connector 1 OptimalDefinition Threshold60fps: 1280 _ 720
Video Input Connector [1..4] PresentationSelection
Define how the video system will behave when you connect a presentation source to the video 
input. 
If the video system is in standby mode, it will wake up when you connect a presentation source. 
Note that sharing the presentation with the far end always requires additional action (press 
Share on the user interface).
Requires user role: ADMIN
Value space: Connector 1: <Manual>   Connector 2: <Manual/Automatic/OnConnect> for 
single camera systems, and <Manual> for dual camera systems   Other connectors: <Manual/
Automatic/OnConnect>
Manual: In manual mode, the contents of the video input will not be presented on the screen 
until you choose it from the user interface. 
Automatic: In automatic mode, the contents on the video input will be presented on screen 
automatically. If more than one source is set to Automatic, the last connected source will be 
used. If any content is active (presented) when a call is disconnected, the content will still be 
displayed locally.
OnConnect: When in on-connect mode, the content on the video input will be presented on 
screen when a cable is connected. Otherwise, the behavior is the same as in manual mode.
Example:
 Video Input Connector 1 PresentationSelection: Manual
Typical resolutions used for different optimal definition profiles, call rates and frame rates
Frame rate
Optimal 
Definition 
Profile
Call rate
768 kbps 1152 kbps 1472 kbps 2560 kbps
4 Mbps
*
6 Mbps
*
H
.26
(o
nl
y i
n S
IP c
al
ls
)
30 fps
Normal
1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
Medium
1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
High
1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
60 fps
Normal
768 × 448
1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720
Medium
1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720
High
1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720
H
.26
4
30 fps
Normal
1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
Medium
1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
High
1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
60 fps
Normal
640 × 360
768 × 448
1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080
Medium
768 × 448
1024 × 576 1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
High
1024 × 576 1280 × 720 1280 × 720 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080 1920 × 1080
H.265 is preferred over H.264, and the maximum bit rate for H.265 is 3 Mbps. When the user sets a higher 
bit rate, the codec will still use H.265 at 3 Mbps as long as all codecs involved supports H.265.
Contents
Introduction
Web interface
System settings
Setting passwords
Appendices
System settings