Events Defined; Setting An Event To Trigger An Alarm Or To Be Logged - Honeywell rapid eye System Administrator Manual

Multi-media
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LocalView
Another case of breach-of-trust can occur through LocalView, which can be used to change a
unit's LAN communication settings.

Events Defined

Fig. 10–13. Sources of Events Include the Unit itself.
Multi-Media units provide notification of events. Events can be produced from four sources:
Outside World event. Rapid Eye's
and
Right to Use ActivEye, by Honeywell Video
a unit to sensors for fire, water and so on, can also manage such events.
Customer-device event. Messages from a cash register, card swipe and so on, that can be sent
to a Multi-Media unit. See
Multi-Media Unit event. For notification a Multi SA of events at the unit or from some events from
to the IT environment. Extended power outages can also be monitored by connecting a Multi-
Media unit to an alarm panel. See
View Operator event. An administrator can trace events caused by View operators, such as use
of a site, and so on. Notification of such events usually matters more than video. See
Events, on p. 197.

Setting an Event to Trigger an Alarm or to Be Logged

Preferences
When events occur, they can be acted upon in the following ways:
Logged. The Multi-Media unit logs the time of the event. These events are not listed in an alarm
session. See fig. 10–15.
Sound an alarm in View. Alarms reach View operators either through an alarm station or
during an alarm session. They are stored in the Multi db. See figure 10–14.
Do both. An event can sound an alarm and be logged.
Document 800-02325 Rev A
07/08
Motion Detection
in video, p. 116,
Analytics, p. 164. can trigger alarms. Connecting
Customer Data and Customer-Device
Tracing
Events, on p. 197.
System Administrator Guide
Tamper
Detection, p. 121.
Events. p. 145.
Tracing
193

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