Axis Communications 241SA ユーザーズマニュアル

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AXIS 241QA/AXIS 241SA - Glossary
Dome network camera - A remotely controllable camera 
mounted in a special housing, characterized by the dome 
shaped glass or plastic covering behind which the camera 
resides. Usually mounted on a ceiling and looking 
downwards, a dome camera can often rotate up to 360 
degrees, thus providing excellent coverage of large areas. 
Duplex - See Full-duplex.
DVD (Digital Versatile Disc) - An optic disc with the 
same physical size as a CD, but with significantly greater 
storage capacity.
DVR (Digital Video Recorder) - A DVR records analog 
video to a hard disk in digital format. Most DVRs use the 
MPEG-2 format for encoding analog video signals.
Encoder - See Video encoder.
Ethernet - Ethernet is the most widely installed local area 
network technology. An Ethernet LAN typically uses 
special grades of twisted pair wires. The most commonly 
installed Ethernet systems are 10BASE-T and 
100BASE-T10, which provide transmission speeds up to 
10 Mbps and 100 Mbps respectively. 
ETRAX (Ethernet Token Ring AXIS) - The ETRAX chip is 
the cornerstone of Axis technology and the 'brain' in 
nearly all Axis products. A multipurpose Linux chip with 
integrated Ethernet networking and extremely flexible I/O 
options. 
Factory default settings - These are the settings that 
originally applied for a device when it was first delivered 
from the factory. If it should become necessary to reset a 
device to its factory default settings, this will, for many 
devices, completely reset any settings that were changed 
by the user. 
Firewall - A firewall works as a barrier between networks, 
e.g. between a Local Area Network and the Internet. The 
firewall ensures that only authorized users are allowed to 
access the one network from the other. A firewall can be 
software running on a computer, or it can be a standalone 
hardware device. 
Fixed dome network camera - This type of camera 
cannot be remotely controlled as regards movement, but 
is mounted in the same type of dome as a controllable 
network dome camera. This camera must be positioned 
manually to provide the required coverage.
Fixed network camera - This type of camera cannot be 
remotely controlled as regards movement. It must be 
positioned manually to provide the required coverage.
Fixed iris - See Autoiris.
Focal length - Measured in millimeters, the focal length 
of a camera lens determines the width of the horizontal 
field of view, which in turn is measured in degrees.
FTP (File Transfer Protocol) - FTP is an application 
protocol that uses the TCP/IP protocols, used to exchange 
files between computers/devices on networks. 
Frame - A frame is a complete video image. In the 2:1 
interlaced scanning format of the RS-170 and CCIR 
formats, a frame is made up of two separate fields of 
262.5 or 312.5 lines interlaced at 60 or 50 Hz to form a 
complete frame, which appears at 30 or 25 Hz. In video 
cameras with a progressive scan, each frame is scanned 
line-by-line and not interlaced; most are also displayed at 
30 and 25 Hz.
Frame rate - The frame rate used to describe the 
frequency at which a video stream is updated is measured 
in frames per second (fps). A higher frame rate is 
advantageous when there is movement in the video 
stream, as it maintains image quality throughout.
Full-duplex - Transmission of data in two directions 
simultaneously. In an audio system this would describe 
e.g. a telephone systems. Half-duplex also provides 
bi-directional communication, but only in one direction 
at a time, as in a walkie-talkie system. See also Simplex.
G.711 - The international standard for encoding 
telephone audio on a 64 kbps channel. It is a pulse code 
modulation (PCM) scheme operating at 8 kHz sample rate. 
G.726 - A frequently used speech-compression algorithm 
in telecommunications due to its high perceived speech 
quality and low resource requirements. 
Gain - Gain is the amplification factor and the extent to 
which an analog amplifier boosts the strength of a signal. 
Amplification factors are usually expressed in terms of 
power. The decibel (dB) is the most common way of 
quantifying the gain of an amplifier. 
Gateway - A gateway is a point in a network that acts as 
an entry point to another network. In a corporate network 
for example, a computer server acting as a gateway often 
also acts as a proxy server and a firewall server. A 
gateway is often associated with both a router, which 
knows where to direct a given packet of data that arrives 
at the gateway, and a switch, which furnishes the actual 
path in and out of the gateway for a given packet.
GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) - GIF is one of the 
most common file formats used for images in web pages. 
There are two versions of the format, 87a and 89a. 
Version 89a supports animations, i.e. a short sequence of 
images within a single GIF file. A GIF89a can also be 
specified for interlaced presentation.
GOV (Group Of VOPs) - A group of VOPs is the basic unit 
of an MPEG-4 video stream. The GOV contains different 
types and numbers of VOPs (I-VOPs, P-VOPs) as 
determined by the GOV length and GOV structure. See 
also VOP.
GOV length - The GOV length determines the number of 
images (VOPs) in the GOV structure.  
See also GOV and VOP.
GOV structure - The GOV structure describes the 
composition of an MPEG-4 video stream, as regards the