Troubleshooting Performance; Performance Criteria; Things That Impact Performance Criteria - Extron electronics QGE 100 User Manual

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Troubleshooting Performance

In an ideal QGE 100 system, the source displayed on the viewing device should be virtually
indistinguishable from the original source. However, under certain circumstances, you
may notice some reduction in performance. This section describes the problems you may
encounter and provides suggestions for minimizing or avoiding them.

Performance Criteria

The performance criteria include the following:

Things that Impact Performance Criteria

Data stream bottlenecks
The QGE 100 streams only data relating to changes in the source display. Therefore, a
source containing a lot of movement (such as an MPEG movie) creates more data than
a source with little or no movement (such as a spreadsheet file). Changes in latency or
refresh rate can arise when a bottleneck occurs at some point in the data path which
restricts the flow of data. Potential bottlenecks include:
Image Refresh Rate — how often the display content is updated. Ideally, this should
match or be as close as possible to the refresh rate of the original source.
As the refresh rate decreases, you notice a loss of smooth motion on the screen. For
example, a moving mouse cursor may appear to move smoothly at a fast refresh rate
but jerkily at slower rates.
The QGE 100 features a variable source refresh and update rate (frame rate). To
ensure smooth motion, it use the highest possible refresh rate. However, during
periods of intense screen activity, the refresh rate may be temporarily reduced to
compensate for the higher volume of data.
Image Latency — how long a change in the original source takes to be seen in the
viewed source. Ideally, this should be instantaneous (in real time).
In practice, there is always be some delay introduced by the electronics and software
that process the data between the original source and the viewing station; however,
this is usually small enough to be ignored. As the latency increases, a greater time lag
becomes noticeable between events happening on the original source and the same
events being seen on the viewed source.
Image Quality — the sharpness and color of the viewed source in comparison to
the original. When the source is viewed at the same resolution as the original, there
should be no discernible differences.
If any scaling is applied to the source (so that it is displayed smaller or larger than the
original) there is always some small loss of sharpness. This is an inherent side effect of
image scaling.
Data Encoding — Data from the source capture process is encoded into a QGE 100
data stream and sent to the network. Under normal circumstances, the QGE is capable
of encoding most sources without any difficulty. However, if you are using a high
resolution source containing a lot of movement, the encoder may generate more data
than can be transmitted between frame captures.
In this situation the encoder can temporarily reduce the refresh rate, allowing more
time for the data to be sent (see
page 55).
"Optimizing the Encoder
QGE 100 • Reference Information
Parameters" on
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