Introduction; Supported Operating Systems - AMX NSS-Vote User Manual

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Introduction

NSS-Vote
or average count. The standard configuration of NSS-Vote supports two voting/microphone
management consoles, up to 21 voting/microphone stations and one public podium microphone.
NSS-Vote allows one or more groups of people to use the system, and each group is represented by
a voting body. Each voting body independently maintains its own default voting options, default
request to speak options, and the names, titles, seat number, voting privileges and speaking
privileges for each of it's members.
Each voting body can contain multiple voting agendas. A voting agenda is a collection of voting
topics to be voted on in a voting session. The voting results of a voting session are stored in its
respective voting body.
Voting agendas can be created remotely using the i!-VotingManager
operate the NSS-Vote system without a pre-made voting agenda by creating a series of voting
topics on the touch panel by Creating an Ad Hoc Topic, see page 13. As topics are voted, the results
are stored in an Agenda Result file. You can view, print and save these results using the
i!-VotingManager software or a standard Internet browser such as Internet Explorer
web-enabled option can also be used to display the voting result for the most recent vote on a PC.
The NSS-Vote system can also manage discussions on a voting topic through Request to Speak.
The Request to Speak system, page 9, allows you to manage microphones for each member and a
public speaking station. With a single option button, the Request to Speak system can switch to one
of the following modes of operation:

Supported Operating Systems

NSS-Vote User's Guide
is designed to manage voting and microphone control for legislative bodies of medium
Operator: The incoming requests are placed in a queue and can be managed manually.
Automatic: Same as the operator, but the queue is managed automatically.
Open: The system allows each station to manage their microphones.
®
®
Windows 95
/98
(with at least 48 MB of installed memory)
®
Windows NT 4.0
Workstation or Server (service pack 6 B or greater, with at least
64 MB of installed memory)
®
Windows 2000
Professional or Server (running on a Pentium 233 MHz processor
(minimum requirement); 300 MHz or faster recommended, with 96 MB of installed
memory.)
Introduction
software on a PC. You can
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