Bloat means that image height and resolution are kept at the expense of image width.Įlectronic image stabilization (EIS) : Turn on to get a smoother and steadier image with less blur. Pucker means that the image width is kept at the expense of image height and resolution. Remove distortion : Use the slider to adjust the correction level. A higher level means that image height and resolution are kept at the expense of image width. A lower level means that the image width is kept at the expense of image height and resolution. The condition is seen more clearly when the image is zoomed out.Ĭrop : Use the slider to adjust the correction level. Barrel distortion is a lens effect that makes the image appear curved and bent outwards. We recommend you not to use multiple image correction features at the same time, since it can lead to performance issues.īarrel distortion correction (BDC) : Turn on to get a straighter image if it suffers from barrel distortion. If the full resolution is larger than your screen size, use the smaller image to navigate in the image.Ĭlick to show the live video stream in full screen. Refresh: Click to refresh the still image in the live view.Ĭlick to show the live view at full resolution. You can also define the pixel size of the box in the Width and Height fields. Drag and resize the box to contain your area of interest. Pixel counter: Click to show the pixel counter. The grid helps you decide if the image is horizontally aligned. Level grid: Click to show the level grid. If you take a snapshot while adaptive stream is turned on, it will use the image resolution selected by the adaptive stream. When adaptive stream is turned on, the maximum frame rate is 30 fps. The adaptive stream is only applied when you view the live video stream in the web interface in a browser. Both values cover only the raw video stream and not the additional bandwidth generated when it’s transported over the network through UDP/TCP/HTTP.Īdaptive stream: Turn on to adapt the image resolution to the viewing client’s actual display resolution, to improve the user experience and help prevent a possible overload of the client’s hardware. The bitrate in the overlay is the average bitrate of the last 5 seconds, and it comes from the browser. The bitrate in the client stream information is the bitrate of the last second, and it comes from the encoding driver of the device. The bitrate information differs from the information shown in a text overlay, because of different information sources. Video format: Select the encoding format to use in the live view.Ĭlient stream information: Turn on to show dynamic information about the video stream used by the browser that shows the live video stream. To configure the storage you need to be logged in as an administrator. If a recording is ongoing, it will resume automatically after a reboot.Ĭlick to show the storage that is configured for the device. Predefined controls: Turn on to use the available onscreen controls.Ĭustom controls: Click Add custom control to add an onscreen control.Ĭlick to manually turn on the heater for a selected period of time.Ĭlick to start a continuous recording of the live video stream. Use the switch to open or close the circuit of a port, for example to test external devices.Ĭlick to manually turn on or turn off the IR illumination. The size of the snapshot depends on the compression that is applied from the specific web-browser engine where the snapshot is received, therefore, the snapshot size may vary from the actual compression setting that is configured in the device.Ĭlick to show I/O output ports. The file is saved in the ‘Downloads’ folder on your computer. Click to take a snapshot of the live video stream.
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