Axis Communications 209 FD-R M12 User Manual
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AXIS 209FD/FD-R/FD-R M12
the other. A firewall can be software running on a computer, or it can 
be a standalone hardware device. 
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) - An application protocol that uses the 
TCP/IP protocols. It is 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.
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 VOP's is the basic unit of an 
MPEG-4 video stream. The GOV contains different types and numbers 
of VOP's (I-VOP's, P-VOP's, etc.) as determined by the GOV length 
and GOV structure. See also VOP.
GOV length - The GOV length determines the number of images 
(VOP's) 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 type of images (I-VOP's or 
P-VOP's) included in the stream, and their internal order. See also 
GOV and VOP.
Half-duplex - See Full-duplex. 
HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) - HTML is the set of “markup” 
symbols or codes inserted in a file intended for display in web 
browser. The markup tells the browser how to display the page's 
words and images for the user.
HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) - HTTP is the set of rules for 
exchanging files (text, graphic images, sound, video, and other 
multimedia files) on the web. The HTTP protocol runs on top of the 
TCP/IP suite of protocols.
Hub - A (network) hub is used to connect multiple devices to the 
network. The hub transmits all data to all devices connected to it, 
whereas a switch will only transmit the data to the device it is 
specifically intended for.
IEEE 802.11 - A family of standards for wireless LANs. The 802.11 
standard supports 1 or 2 Mbit/s transmission on the 2.4 GHz band. 
IEEE 802.11b specifies an 11 Mbit/s data rate on the 2.4 GHz band, 
while 802.11a allows up to 54 Mbit/s on the 5 GHz band.
Image compression - Image compression minimizes the file size (in 
bytes) of an image. Two of the most common compressed image 
formats are JPEG and GIF.
Interlacing - Interlaced video is video captured at 50 pictures (known 
as fields) per second, of which every 2 consecutive fields (at half 
height) are then combined into 1 frame. Interlacing was developed 
many years ago for the analog TV world and is still used widely 
today. It provides good results when viewing motion in standard TV 
pictures, although there is always some degree of distortion in the 
image.
To view interlaced video on e.g. a computer monitor, the video must 
first be de-interlaced, to produce progressive video, which consists of 
complete images, one after the other, at 25 frames per second. See 
also Progressive scan. 
IP (Internet Protocol) - The Internet Protocol is a method 
transmitting data over a network. Data to be sent is divided into 
individual and completely independent “packets.” Each computer (or 
host) on the Internet has at least one address that uniquely identifies 
it from all others, and each data packet contains both the sender's 
address and the receiver's address. 
The Internet Protocol ensures that the data packets all arrive at the 
intended address. As IP is a connections protocol, which means that 
there is no established connection between the communication 
end-points, packets can be sent via different routes and do not need 
to arrive at the destination in the correct order. 
Once the data packets have arrived at the correct destination, another 
protocol - Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) - puts them in the 
right order. See also TCP.
IP Address - An IP address is simply an address on an IP network 
used by a computer/device connected to that network. IP addresses 
allow all the connected computers/devices to find each other and to 
pass data back and forth. 
To avoid conflicts, each IP address on any given network must be 
unique. An IP address can be assigned as fixed, so that it does not 
change, or it can be assigned dynamically (and automatically) by 
DHCP. 
An IP address consists of four groups (or quads) of decimal digits 
separated by periods, e.g. 130.5.5.25. Different parts of the address 
represent different things. Some part will represent the network 
number or address, and some other part will represent the local 
machine address. 
See also IP (Internet Protocol).
I-VOP - See VOP.
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) - Together with the GIF 
file format, JPEG is an image file type commonly used on the web. A 
JPEG image is a bitmap, and usually has the file suffix '.jpg' or 
“.jpeg.” When creating a JPEG image, it is possible to configure the 
level of compression to use. As the lowest compression (i.e. the 
highest quality) results in the largest file, there is a trade-off between 
image quality and file size. 
kbit/s (kilobits per second) - A measure of the bit rate, i.e. the rate at 
which bits are passing a given point. See also Bit rate.
LAN (Local Area Network) - A LAN is a group of computers and 
associated devices that typically share common resources within a 
limited geographical area.
Linux - Linux is an open source operating system within the Unix 
family. Because of its robustness and availability, Linux has won 
popularity in the open source community and among commercial 
application developers.
MAC address (Media Access Control address) - A MAC address is a 
unique identifier associated with a piece of networking equipment, or 
more specifically, its interface with the network. For example, the 
network card in a computer has its own MAC address. 
Manual iris - This is the opposite to an autoiris, i.e. the camera iris 
must be adjusted manually to regulate the amount of light allowed to 
reach the image sensor.
Mbit/s (Megabits per second) - A measure of the bit rate, i.e. the rate 
at which bits are passing a given point. Commonly used to give the 
“speed” of a network. A LAN might run at 10 or 100 Mbit/s. See also