Manual Epiphan Lecture Recorder x2
Manual Epiphan Lecture Recorder x2
Manual Epiphan Lecture Recorder x2
UserGuide
Version 3.12.0
May 20, 2014
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Thank You forChoosingEpiphan!
At Epiphan Systems Inc. (Epiphan), product function and quality are our top priority. We make every effort to
make sure that our products exceed your expectations.
Product Feedback
Your feedback is important! We regularly contact our customers to ensure our products meet your
performance and reliability requirements. We strive to continually enhance our products to accommodate your
needs. Please let us know how you think we can improve our products by emailing your suggestions to
[email protected].
Specifications
Go to the Recorders page of the Epiphan website to get the most recent product specifications and additional
information about the Lecture Recorder x2.
Warranty
All Epiphan Systems products are provided with a 100% return to depot warranty for one year from the date of
purchase.
Technical Support
Epiphans products are backed by our professional support team. If you are having issues with your product,
please gather details about your system and contact our team by:
l Emailing [email protected]
l Live chat via the link on our support site http://www.epiphan.com/support/
l Phone toll free at 1-877-599-6581 or call +1-613-599-6581
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What's New in Release 3.12.0
The following features were introduced or in some cases enhanced in release 3.12.0. For a description of new and
changed features in previous releases refer to Releases and Features .
When setting your CDN, you now have a choice between streaming with RTSPannouncement or RTMP push. Both
RTSP and RTMP can be used for live streaming, however not all CDNs or media servers support both formats.
SAP Announce
Your allows you to advertise your stream over a local network using SAP Announce. To use this feature, your stream
must be setup to use UDP streaming. Local viewers can view the stream using a software or hardware media player.
Viewers are presented with a list of available channels, similar to a television listing. Viewers need only click on a stream
or channel and the video is streamed to their desktop, mobile or tablet.
Welcome 1
About this Guide 1
Quick Start 8
Step 1: Physical setup and power on 8
Step 2: Confirm signals from input sources 9
Step 3: Admin discovery and login 9
Step 4: Setup the video source 10
Step 5: Configure the channel 10
Step 6: Record the stream 11
Whats Next? 11
PART 1: Setup 13
1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface 14
Connect via DNS-based Service Discovery 14
Connect via the Epiphan Discovery Utility 16
Connect via Persistent Static IP Address 17
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Verify Date and Time Settings 32
Change the Time Zone 34
Configure Synchronized Time (NTP, PTP v1, and RDATE) 34
Manually Configure the Date and Time 36
PART 2: Sources 41
2-1 Identify sources 42
2-2 Configure a video source 43
2-3 Configure an audio source 45
Add an audio source to a channel 45
Configure audio settings 45
Set audio volume 46
View audio signal strength 47
PART 3: Channels 54
3-1 Configure channels 55
Create a DVI channel 55
Create a Video channel 57
Configure picture in picture or picture with picture layout 60
Enable and disable a channel 62
PART 4: Stream 83
4-1 Stream your video 84
View available video formats 84
Choose a streaming option 85
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Retrieve stream URLs 88
Configure streaming ports 89
Stream content using HTTP or RTSP 90
Stream content using a Content Distribution Network 90
Stream content using multicast streaming 97
Stream content using UPnP 101
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7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface 145
Connect to the tablet interface 145
Confidence monitoring using the tablet interface 147
Verify disk space via the tablet interface 148
Control recording via the tablet interface 149
Switch to the full admin interface 149
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Broadcast ConfigurationKeys 180
Channel Encoder ConfigurationKeys 181
Channel Logo Configuration Keys 182
Channel Layout Configuration Keys 183
Audio Configuration Keys 184
Stream Publishing Configuration Keys 184
RTSPAnnounce Configuration Keys (Publish Type 2) 185
RTP/UDPConfiguration Keys (Publish Type 3) 186
MPEG-TSConfiguration Keys (Publish Types 4 and 5) 186
RTMPPush Configuration Keys (Publish Type 6) 186
ContentMetadata Configuration Keys 187
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Welcome
Welcome, and thank you for buying Epiphans Lecture Recorder x2. This guide will help you configure your new
system.
To get started, review the Lecture Recorder x2 Overview and What's in the Box? sections. Next, a Quick Start guide
walks you through the basic steps to get a single video (and optional audio) source configured as a streamable,
recordable output from the Lecture Recorder x2.
Following the quick start section, a set of task-based procedures help you to tweak the system exactly how you want it.
These procedures are broken into seven categories: Setup, Sources, Channels , Stream, Record, View, and Maintenance.
This is a warning.
Throughout this guide there are situations where more than one solution will complete a task. In those cases the
guide describes the simplest or most common variation first.
The following table describes the storage capacity and types of inputs support by the Lecture Recorder x2.
Table 1 Inputs and Storage specifications for Lecture Recorder x2
DVI-I DVI-I
Model S-Video Audio Storage
(single link) (dual link)
Lecture Recorder x2
1 - 1 1 16 GB
What's in the Box?
The following is included in the Lecture Recorder x2 box:
1. The Lecture Recorder x2 device
2. One "Big Red Button"
3. One VGA to DVI-I cable
4. One HDMI to DVI-I adapter
5. One DVI-I to DVI-I cable
6. One composite to S-Video cable
7. One Ethernet cable
8. One Power over Ethernet injector
Table 2 Description of Included Cables (Images are for cable type identification, actual cable appearance may vary.)
Big Red Button Starts and Stops recording when connected to the
device.
DVI-I Dual Link cable Connects a DVI source to the systems DVI port(s).
VGA to DVI cable Connects a VGA source to the systems DVI port(s).
HDMI to DVI adapter Connects an HDMI source to the systems DVI port(s).
Front Panel
This section describes the front panel connectors and indicators.
Reset button Resets the Lecture Recorder x2 back to its factory configuration defaults.
Status LEDs Three LEDs on the front panel indicate the following Lecture Recorder x2
status:
Flashing green LED indicates files are copied to an external USB drive.
Note: If the periodic disk check function occurs during start up, it may take
up to 20 minutes to power up the device. During this time the blue LED is
flashes (two intermittent flashes) and the green LED flashes. See Storage
Disk Maintenance for more information.
Note: Using more than one USB device may impact system performance.
S-Video input Connect to an s-Video source or a composite video source using the
adapter (included).
Audio In
Connect to an audio input source.
Back Panel
This section describes the back panel connectors and indicators.
Table 4 Lecture Recorder x2 Back Panel Descriptions
DVI Out Connect to video equipment, such as a monitor or projector to confirm the
video stream is captured.
Note: This connection can convert a VGA input signal to DVI output signal.
To confirm the video stream from an s-Video port, refer to Configure
channels.
Note: Using more than one USB device may impact system performance.
RJ-45 Attach the provided RJ-45 cable and connect to a powered Ethernet port.
The port is auto-sensing and supports negotiations at 10/100 speeds.
Power over Ethernet is used to power Lecture Recorder x2. If the network
connection does not provide power, use the provided power over Ethernet
injector to power the device.
Quick Start
This section helps you get up and running quickly with your Lecture Recorder x2:
l Step 1: Physical setup and power on
l Step 2: Confirm signals from input sources
l Step 3: Admin discovery and login
l Step 4: Setup the video source
l Step 5: Configure the channel
l Step 6: Record the stream
These instructions include steps for setting up and configuring audio. Skip these optional steps if you do
not want to configure an audio source at this time.
The steps below use DNS-based service discovery (a type of zero-configuration networking) to access the device.
Depending on the operating system on your admin computer you may need to install some software before you can
use DNS-based discovery.
Table 5 Installing Bonjour Print Services
MacOSX The Bonjour software used for service discovery is built into the Mac OS. No special actions are
needed.
Linux The Avahi implementation used for DNS-based discovery is shipped with most Linux
distributions. If necessary, check with your administrator to ensure you have the Avahi
package installed.
This quick start is meant for systems that support DHCP and DNS, however if your system does not support
either protocol, refer to Connect to the Admin Interface for other discovery methods. Return here when
prompted for the web interface user name and password.
You are able to access the system's web interface on the local network by specifying its serial number in a web browser
on your admin computer.
1. Find the systems serial number. It is printed on a sticker on the back of the device.
2. Type the following string into the address bar of your web browser on your admin computer and press Enter.
(<serial> is the serial number of your Lecture Recorder x2):
http://<serial>.local/admin
For example: http://3D24A1.local/admin
3. Enter the user name and password then click OK. The administrative user is admin. Initially no password is set.
To set a password follow the procedure outlined in Setting and Changing User Passwords.
4. Optionally, navigate to the Network link under the Configuration heading and note the IP address of the
system.
Source setup is complete. The system automatically detected and adjusted the image capture settings at start up and
will continue to adjust every 60 seconds during operation (interval is configurable). The systems goal is to produce the
best quality captured image given the source equipment used. Generally no further configuration tweaks are needed.
Your stream setup is complete. Since most of the steps are pre-configured; you are up and running with a stream very
quickly. You can share the live broadcast link with your viewers on your local area network (LAN). Depending on your
internet connection and upstream bandwidth, you may need to adjust the video bitrate down before sharing over the
internet.
Whats Next?
Now that you have a source setup and ready to stream, you can fine-tune the system to your exact requirements. You
can look at topics such as:
l Customize your channel
l Stream your video
l File and Recording Transfer
l User Administration
When you have completed system tuning, make sure to back up the device configuration using the procedure
described in:
l Save and Restore Device Configuration
Refer to the table of contents for a complete list of the topics covered.
PART 1: Setup
If you followed through the quick start guide, you already have a basic configuration and possibly a recording
of an input. Before you tweak the channel this part of the manual helps you to get your Lecture Recorder x2
properly configured for your network.
Topics covered:
l Connect to the Admin Interface
l User Administration
l Configure Network Settings
l Configure Date and Time
l Restrict Viewers by IPAddress
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface
The first time you access the web interface you may not know the IP address of the device. The Lecture
Recorder x2 supports a number of ways to determine the IP address.
This section covers two discovery methods that work with networks that support Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP) and a method that works for networks that do not support DHCP.
You can also connect to a reduced Operator tablet interface. See Connect to the tablet interface
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface
MacOSX The Bonjour software used for service discovery is built into the Mac OS. No special
actions are needed.
Linux The Avahi implementation used for DNS-based discovery is shipped with most Linux
distributions. If necessary, check with your administrator to ensure you have the Avahi
package installed.
To access the Lecture Recorder x2 web interface via DNS service discovery:
1. Find the systems serial number. It is printed on a sticker on the back of the unit.
2. Type the following string into the address bar of your web browser on your admin computer (where
<serial> is the serial number of your Lecture Recorder x2):
http://<serial>.local/admin
For example: http://95dd40d5.local/admin
3. Enter the user name and password then click OK. The administrative user is admin. Initially no
password is set. To set a password follow the procedure outlined in Setting and Changing User
Passwords.
4. Optionally, navigate to the Network link under the Configuration heading and note the IP address of
the system.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface
To access the Lecture Recorder x2 web interface via the Epiphan discovery utility:
1. Launch the discovery utility.
2. Click Search to find all the Epiphan devices on the network; a list similar to the following appears.
3. If more than one device appears, select the one you wish to configure by matching the serial number
listed with the serial number marked on the back of the device.
4. Optionally, note the IP Address shown in the stream properties. Use this for quicker access to the device
on future configuration sessions.
5. Click the Web config button; your browser will open and point to the web interface page.
6. Enter the user name and password then click OK. The administrative user is admin. Initially no
password is set. To set a password follow the procedure outlined in User Administration.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface
The Lecture Recorder x2 is pre-configured with the following static address defaults:
l IP Address: 192.168.255.250
l Netmask: 255.255.255.252
l User Name: admin
l Password: your admin password (by default set to no password)
To access the Lecture Recorder x2 web interface via the persistent static IP address:
1. Record the network settings of the workstation being used to connect to the Lecture Recorder x2 so
that they can be restored later.
2. Temporarily change the network configuration on the workstation to the following:
a. Use Static IP assignment
b. IP address: 192.168.255.249
c. Subnet mask: 255.255.255.252
3. Establish an Ethernet connection between the Lecture Recorder x2 and the workstation by one of the
following methods:
a. Connect the device to a local Ethernet network shared with the workstation.
b. Connect the device directly to the workstations Ethernet port using either a regular or a
crossover Ethernet cable.
4. Start a web browser on the workstation and browse to: http://192.168.255.250/admin/
5. Log in as the administrator user with the user name admin and the admin password (by default there is
no password); the web interface page opens.
6. Click the Networking link in the Configuration menu.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-1 Connect to the Admin Interface
7. Select the radio button to use a static address and configure the device with a static IP address and
network settings relevant to the network being used. For specific details about the settings presented,
see Configure Network Settings.
8. Restore the previously saved network configurations on the workstation.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
By default, none of these users have passwords. For security purposes you should add passwords to the admin
and operator accounts.
Admin
The admin account is the main operator used for all device configuration. This user has access to all options in
the web interface.
Operator
The operator account is a subclass of the admin account. The operator can log in and view all configuration
items but may only make changes to a small number of options. This account is intended for an operator to
start and stop recordings, download recordings, or perform network diagnostics.
Viewer
The viewer account is for all end-users who are permitted to view the streamed channels. By default, when
there is no password, users are not prompted for a username and password when viewing a channel. A
username and password prompt appears when there is a viewer password set.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
Current User
When logged in to the web interface, the current username is displayed at the top right corner of the screen.
User Privileges
The following table outlines the privileges for each user:
Table 7 User Privileges in the Web Interface
Channel Operations
Publish a Stream
Download RecordedFiles
Delete RecordedFiles
SystemConfiguration Operations
Configure FTPServer
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
Configure USBTethering
Perform NetworkDiagnostics
Select BrandingTemplate
Restore DeviceConfiguration
RestoreFactoryConfiguration
Perform DiskCheck
View DiskInformation
Upgrade Firmware
None of the accounts have passwords assigned by default, but since both the admin and the operator user
have access to the web admin interface, you should always have a password for both admin and operator
accounts. Refer to your system administrator for your organizations specific password requirements.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
Passwords are case sensitive and can use all alpha-numeric keys in the ASCII range. Your password can be up
to 255 characters long, but should not include any spaces.
Setting a users password causes the user to be logged out. Be ready to log back in with the new
admin password or have operators and viewers log in with the appropriate new password. Viewers
may need to refresh their browser window or press play in their media player.
If you lose the admin password, refer to the section Overcoming Lost Passwords.
For security reasons, the current password appears as eight dots regardless of password
length, and even if there is no password set.
5. Highlight and delete the confirmation password for the selected user.
6. Select the users password field and type a new password for the user.
The new password must have between 1-255 alpha-numeric characters or special characters
with no spaces. Passwords are case sensitive.
7. Select the users password confirmation field and confirm the new password.
8. Click Apply.
9. If you were logged in as the user whose password you just changed, you are logged out and must log
back in with the new password. If you added or changed the viewers password, all viewers stream will
pause until they log in with the new password.
If desired, you may specify multiple account passwords on the same page before clicking Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
Clearing a users password will cause that user to be logged out. Be ready to log back in with the
new admin password. If viewers are watching the broadcast when the viewer password is cleared
they will be logged out. Viewers may need to refresh their browser window or press play in their
media player to trigger the login prompt.
For security purposes, the current password appears as eight dots regardless of password
length, and even if there is no password set.
5. Highlight and delete the confirmation password for the selected user.
6. Click Apply.
7. If you were logged in as the user whose password you just cleared, you are logged out and must log
back in without a password. If you cleared the viewers password, all viewers stream will pause until they
log in without a password.
If you have lost the admin password you will need to reset the device to factory defaults, which resets to the
default blank admin password. See Restoring Factory Configuration.
After resetting to factory defaults, you can restore a configuration file with your known good configuration.
Remember to set user passwords after loading a configuration. Passwords are not saved in the configuration
file. See Save and Restore Device Configuration.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-2 User Administration
2. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
3. You are prompted for a username and password.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
Label Description/Options
MACAddress A media access control address (MAC address) is a unique identifier for the
network interface. The value is read-only and cannot be changed. You may need
to share this value with your system administrator.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
Label Description/Options
Current IPAddress Reflects the current internet protocol address (IP address) of the system. This
value is either obtained from the DHCP server (if using DHCP) or is the configured
static IP address. The Lecture Recorder x2 supports IPv4 addresses. It does not
support IPv6 addresses.
4. Select the radio button use static address, if not already selected.
5. Enter the desired IP Address and Network Mask.
6. Enter the Default Gateway address. If you do not have a default gateway for your network, enter the
new static IP address of the Lecture Recorder x2.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
The default gateway cannot be left blank. If no default gateway is specified, unexpected
behavior occurs.
7. Enter the DNS Server address. If you do not have a DNS server, enter the new static IP address of the
device.
The DNSServer address cannot be left blank. If no DNSServer is specified, unexpected behavior
occurs.
8. Change the MTU Size value only if needed. See the table below for information on maximum
transmission unit (MTU) values.
9. Click Apply to save the changes; the changes are saved and a message appears asking you to reboot.
10. Select the Maintenance link under the Configuration menu; the maintenance page appears.
11. Click the Reboot Now button near the bottom of the page.
12. Wait for the system to reboot.
13. Open the Web interface using the new IP address.
14. Log as admin and reload the Networking page to verify all changes were applied.
The following table describes applicable fields when setting a static IP address.
Table 9 Static IPAddress Fields
Label Description/Options
Use DHCP Select this radio button to dynamically obtain an IP address at boot up.
Use static address Select this radio button to use the configured static IP address.
IP Address The internet protocol address (IP Address) to assign. This value is may be obtained
from your system administrator. The Lecture Recorder x2 supports IPv4 addresses. It
does not support IPv6 addresses.
Network Mask Also called the subnet mask, this value denotes a range of IP addresses. This value may
be obtained from your system administrator, determined from another computer on
the same subnet, or calculated using an online subnet calculator.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
Label Description/Options
Default Gateway The network node that serves as an access point to the rest of the network. This value
cannot be blank. Specify the systems IP address if you dont have a default gateway on
your network.
DNS Server The domain name system server (DNS server) translates human-readable hostnames
into corresponding IP addresses. Specify the systems IP address if you dont have a
DNSserver on your network.
MTU Size The maximum transmission unit (MTU) specifies the maximum packet size for transfer
on the network. The default value is 1500, which is the largest value allowed by
Ethernet at the network layer. Its best if all nodes in your network use the same value,
so only change this value if you know other nodes use a different value.
Configure DHCP
Occasionally, such as when moving your system to a new network, your Lecture Recorder x2 must switch from
static IP address allocation to dynamic allocation via DHCP. You can accomplish this three ways:
l Use the factory reset button to clear all your settings. See Restoring Factory Configuration.
l Load a configuration file that uses DHCP networking. See Load a saved device configuration.
l Changing the network settings. See the procedure below.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
7. Select the Maintenance link under the Configuration menu; the maintenance page appears.
8. Click the Reboot Now button near the bottom of the page.
9. Wait for the system to reboot.
10. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
11. Log as admin and reload the Networking page to verify all changes were applied.
The following table describes the fields applicable when configuring DHCP on the Lecture Recorder x2.
Table 10 DHCP Fields
Label Description/Options
Use DHCP Select this radio button to dynamically obtain an IP address at boot up.
Use static Use static address Select this radio button to use the configured static IP address.
address
MTU Size The maximum transmission unit (MTU) specifies the maximum packet size for transfer on
the network. The default value is 1500, which is the largest value allowed by Ethernet at the
network layer. Its best if all nodes in your network use the same value, so only change this
value if you know other nodes use a different value.
When the system falls over to the backup network type (i.e. from Ethernet to mobile, or vice versa)
all streaming sessions are closed and the clients will need to reconnect. You may need to provide a
new stream URL(containing the new IPaddress) to your viewers. See the channel information page
to get the new stream URL.
All actively published streams are closed and reconnected via the mobile network automatically
(assuming the required publishing server is accessible from the mobile network).
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
4. Login as admin.
5. Select the Network link in the Configuration menu; the network configuration page opens.
6. Click the dropdown box next to Use phone/tablet connection in the USB phone/tablet section; the
following choices appear:
Table 11 Mobile Tethering Options
Label Description/Options
No tethering Specifies that USB tethering is available for connecting a mobile device as a
configuration utility (i.e use the web browser), but no mobile data is used.
Prefer ethernet When chosen, the system tries to use the Ethernet network first. It switches to use
the mobile network (tethering) when the Ethernet network is no longer available.
To prevent viewer interruptions, mobile data will continue to be used until the
mobile network is down or publishing is restarted.
Prefer When chosen, the system tries to use the mobile network (tethering) first. It
tethering switches to use the Ethernet (hard-wired) when the mobile network is no longer
available. To prevent viewer interruptions, Ethernet data will continue to be used
until the Ethernet network is down or publishing is restarted.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-3 Configure Network Settings
4. Click ping or traceroute; an animation appears to the left of the address to indicate processing is
underway.
5. Upon completion of the command, read the results from the console-like display is shown below the
Network Diagnostics setting.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-4 Configure Date and Time
32
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-4 Configure Date and Time
The date and time configuration page also indicates whether the device is currently using synchronized or
manually set time, and whether or not a local network time protocol (ntp) server is running.
The following table describes the date and time configuration fields.
Table 12 Date and Time Options
Label Description/Options
Enable time Whether or not a time synchronization protocol is being used for setting time. (If not
synchronization selected, time is set manually.)
Set time manually Whether or not time is set manually. (If time is not being set manually, a time
synchronization protocol is used.)
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-4 Configure Date and Time
Label Description/Options
Date The current date. (This is the current date even if the radio button Set time manually is
not selected.)
Time The current time. (This is the current time even if the radio button Set time manually is
not selected.)
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-4 Configure Date and Time
Label Description/Options
NTP Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used for clock synchronization over the internet.
There are many publicly available NTP servers you can use, or your company may
have its own NTP server. For more information about NTP and to find NTPservers,
refer to http://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Servers/WebHome.
RDATE RDATE is a tool for querying the current time from the network. It is generally
considered obsolete and has been replaced by NTP.
PTP v1 The Precision Time Protocol (PTP) is used for clock synchronization over the
internet. It has clock accuracy in the sub-microsecond range, making it more
granular than NTP.
6. Tailor the synchronization protocol with the required parameters as described below.
7. If NTP is selected:
a. Enter the IP address or server name for the NTP server in the Server IP Address field.
NTP uses UDP packets and port 123. If the device is behind a firewall and accessing an
external NTP server, UDP packets must be permitted on port 123.
8. If RDATE is selected:
a. Enter the IP address or server name for the RDATE server in the Server IP Address field.
b. Select an update interval from the drop down box.
9. If PTP v1 is selected:
a. Select the multicast address of PTP v1 server from the PTPdomain dropdown.
PTP uses UDP packets and ports 319 and 320 . If the device is behind a firewall and accessing
an external PTP server, UDP packets must be permitted on ports 319 and 320.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-4 Configure Date and Time
36
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-5 Restrict Viewers by IPAddress
IP address restriction is valid for the viewer only and does not affect the web interface or the
mobile configuration interface.
If your viewer account has a password, your viewers must connect to the device from a computer (or gateway)
with a permitted IP address and must also supply the username and password before they can view the
broadcast.
IP Address restriction is not configurable per channel. Restrictions affect all broadcasts / streams
from the device.
To restrict access by IP address you need to know the IP addresses, or range of addresses for your viewers. By
default all IP addresses are allowed to connect to the broadcast.
If youre not familiar with creating allow/deny lists, refer to the examples below this procedure for assistance
with crafting your lists.
If a user attempts to connect to the stream from a disallowed IPaddress, access is denied. If connecting by
internet browser, the message "IPaddress rejected." is displayed.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-5 Restrict Viewers by IPAddress
Label Description/Options
Allow IP's Enter individual IP Addresses or IP Address ranges, separated by commas. To specify a
range, use a hyphen (-). Optional spaces improve readability.
Users connecting from addresses in this list are permitted to view broadcasts from the
device, provided their IP address is not in the Deny IPs list.
To allow all (except IP addresses in the deny list, if any), leave the field blank.
You can use the Allow list by itself, or in conjunction with the Deny IPs list as an exception
to a rule in the allow list.
Deny IP's Enter individual IP Addresses or IP Address ranges, separated by commas. To specify a
range, use a hyphen (-). Optional spaces improve readability.
Users connecting from addresses in this list are not allowed to view broadcasts from the
device, unless their IP address is in the Allow IPs list. If a specific IP address is in both lists,
access to the stream is denied.
You can use the Deny list by itself, or in conjunction with the Allow IPs list as an exception
to a rule in the allow list.
Examples
Allow List with Distinct IP Addresses
The simplest allow/deny list is to use the list of known IP addresses to craft a list of allowed IP addresses. All
other addresses are denied access to the broadcast.
For example if your device is accessible on your local area network (LAN) and you want to make sure only the
CEOs specific desktop, laptop and tablet computers (with IP Addresses 192.168.1.50, 192.168.1.51, and
192.165.1.75, respectively) can connect to the broadcast, construct the following allow list:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-5 Restrict Viewers by IPAddress
Allow: 192.168.1.200-192.168.1.250
Note that we could have specified two of the IP addresses in the previous example as a range.
Your list can have multiple ranges and multiple distinct IP addresses, provided they are separated by commas.
For example imagine your device is accessible on your local area network (LAN) and you want to allow any
computer on the LAN can access the stream except your publicly-accessible boardroom (with IP address
192.168.1.211). You can use the following deny list (leave the allow list empty) to permit all computers except
the boardroom computer:
Deny: 192.168.1.211
As with Allow lists, your deny list can specify a range of IP addresses, and can specify multiple ranges or distinct
IP addresses in a comma-separated list.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 1-5 Restrict Viewers by IPAddress
Deny: 192.168.1.211
Both lists can have multiple ranges and multiple distinct IP addresses, provided they are separated by commas.
The deny list is an "exception" list for the allow list. So to craft the rule described above we need to allow all the
computers in the local subnet, then deny specific sub-ranges including two groups of boardroom computers
ensuring the cafeteria computer's IP address is not in the deny list:
Allow: 192.168.1.1-192.168.1.250
40
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 2: Sources
PART 2: Sources
Now that you know how to connect to the admin interface, you are ready to configure your input sources. The
following sections provide an overview of the types of sources you can connect to your Lecture Recorder x2
and how to configure each source.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-1 Identify sources
The web interface automatically discovers all input sources and displays them in the Stream Setup section of
the web admin interface.
When a source is connected, the system automatically detects and adjusts the image capture settings at start
up and continues to adjust every 60 seconds during operation (interval is configurable). The systems goal is to
produce the best quality captured image given the source equipment used. Generally no further configuration
is needed.
42
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-2 Configure a video source
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Ensure a source is connected to the input port, see Table Configure a video source.
4. From the web interface, click Frame Grabber from the Configuration menu; the Frame Grabber
Adjustments page opens.
5. Make fine adjustments if required, however in most cases the video is ready to view from a channel and
ready to stream.
Value Description
Use signal from Specify the native color space of the signal source, either RGB or YUV. The
following values are available:
l VGA/DVI signal (RGB) (this is the default setting)
l Component signal (YCrCb)
Interval between When a source is setup, the system automatically detects and adjusts the image
VGA signal and capture settings at start up and continues to adjust every 60 seconds during
autoadjustments operation. To change the number of seconds between update, enter a value, or
(sec) 0 to disable the feature, otherwise the default of 60 seconds is set.
Vertical shift When an image is not aligned in the window, use this feature to move an image
up or down on the screen. The values range from 20 (moves the image up) to
20 (moves the image down).
Horizontal shift When an image is not aligned in the window, use this feature to move an image
left or right on the screen. The values range from -999 (moves the image to the
left) to 999 (moves the image to the right).
Phase Specifies phase adjustments for VGAsignals. Generally not used unless value is
provided by Epiphan support.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-2 Configure a video source
Value Description
PLL adjustment Changing the value adjusts the horizontal resolution of the image. Adjust the
value using small increments until the image is sharper. The value ranges from 0-
999 to 999.
Offset The Offset and Gain parameters function as contrast control for an image. The
Offset controls the darker parts of the image and the gain controls the bright
parts of the image. Adjust both values to optimize image quality. Adjust the
values using small increments until the image is sharper. If you set Offset to a
high value, set a high value for the gain to balance the two.
Gain The Gain and Offset parameters function as contrast control for an image. The
Gain controls the bright parts of the image and Offset controls the darker parts
of the image. Adjust both values to optimize image quality. Adjust the values
using small increments until the image is sharper. If you set Offset to a high
value, set a high value for the Gain to balance the two.
Aspect Ratio Sets the aspect ratio of the captured image. The default is 4:3. Set the value to
Wide mode when capturing images that have a wide aspect ratio. Using the
incorrect setting causes the image to be distorted or stretched.
44
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-3 Configure an audio source
Use the following sections to configure the audio settings that control the audio input:
7. Click Apply.
8. To select an audio codec for an audio stream, see Fine-tune channel configuration.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-3 Configure an audio source
3. From the web interface, scroll to the channel section and click the channel to which you want to
configure audio settings; the menu expands.
4. Click Stream Setup; the Stream setup configuration page opens.
5. Scroll to Audio settings.
9. Click on the Audio bitrate drop-down menu to choose the audio transmission speed. Increasing this
value produces better sound quality but uses more system processing power and bandwidth.
10. Click Apply.
2. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection method. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
3. Login as admin.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-3 Configure an audio source
6. Select the Input source from the drop-down menu. Choose Line (default setting), to capture system
audio, or choose Mic to capture audio from a microphone connected to the audio input port.
7. Click on the Input Amplifier volume drop-down menu. A list of percentages is displayed. Choose to
amplify the volume by a percentage of the original volume. The default setting is 30%. Decrease the
percentage if the output volume is too loud. Increase the percentage if the output volume is not loud
enough.
Adjusting the Input Amplifier volume adjusts the output audio as well.
8. Enable Microphone 20dB boost to provide additional amplification for the microphone inputs.
9. Click Apply.
To view audio signal strength when an audio source is connected to the device:
47
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-3 Configure an audio source
6. View the strength of the audio signal. The following example shows an audio input with a strong signal.
48
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-4 Fine-tune source configuration
Changing how source images are displayed may cause undesired results, for example
experimenting with the PLLsetting may result in the image not being displayed properly. It is a
good practice to backup your configuration settings so that you can revert back to a good
configuration if the changes that you made are not desirable. See Save and Restore Device
Configuration .
6. Click Apply. View the output by clicking on the Snapshot link in the Info window. You may need to make
further adjustments to move the video left or right.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-4 Fine-tune source configuration
Adjust these settings by the smallest values possible; compensate for a large change to one by making a large
change to the other. Setting both offset and gain to high values can result in poor video quality.
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, click Frame Grabber from the Configuration menu; the Frame Grabber
Adjustments page opens.
4. Scroll to Gain.
5. Enter a small value, for example 1 to 25 in the field to brighten the image.
6. Scroll to Offset.
7. Enter a small value, for example 1 to 15 , to balance the gain setting . The Offset value behaves as a
contrast to the Gain value.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-4 Fine-tune source configuration
8. Click Apply. View the output by clicking on the Snapshot link in the Info window. You may need to make
further adjustments to fine tune the brightness and contrast.
4. Compare the aspect ratio from the source with the aspect ratio from theLecture Recorder x2 info
window. Confirm if there is a mismatch.
5. If there is a mismatch, go to the stream setup for the channel and change the frame size to match the
frame size that is sent from the source. See Configure channels.
6. If the video is still squeezed horizontally on the screen, follow the steps below.
7. From the web interface, click Frame Grabber from the Configuration menu; the Frame Grabber
Adjustments page opens.
8. Scroll to the Aspect ratio setting.
9. Select Wide mode from the drop-down menu, when the source is wider than what is being displayed in
the preview or Live View.
10. Click Apply. View the output by clicking on the Snapshot link in the Info window.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-4 Fine-tune source configuration
When you connect the VGADVI to a video source, the video source sees the device as a monitor. Just like a
monitor, the VGADVI contains the EDID that is used by the video source to determine the video signal to send.
The uploaded EDID is permanently installed on your VGADVI and will always share this EDIDwith the video
input source.
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 2-4 Fine-tune source configuration
3. To download a new EDID file, go to Epiphan Downloads. The downloads page opens.
4. Click EDID; a page displaying a list of EDIDs opens.
5. Click on an EDIDfrom the list. The file is saved to your downloads folder on your C: drive.
6. From the web interface, click Frame Grabber from the Configuration menu; the Frame Grabber
Adjustments page opens.
7. Scroll to EDID upload.
8. Click Choose File. A browser page opens.
9. Browse to the location where the custom EDID file was saved and select the file.
10. Click open. The EDID is uploaded. An information dialog box appears.
53
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 3: Channels
PART 3: Channels
Channels organize and display content captured from DVI, VGA, HDMI, audio and camera input sources. A
channel can be set up to display the content from one input source, or may capture, stream and record
content from two input sources. You can identify your channel by adding a corporate logo, company
information, corporate color and time stamps.
Through channel configuration and fine tuning you can maximize your stream quality, minimize your
processing requirements and bandwidth and specify how the video is presented and streamed to a sharing
destination/viewer.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
While configuring a channel, consider opening a live preview of the channel in another tab or browser window
so you can see the changes as they are applied. Right-click Live View and select open in a new window or
open in a new tab to start the preview.
Procedures to select a codec for compression, add a time stamp to the stream, and select a layout when two
sources are configured are described in separate procedures.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
Enabling this feature greys out the fields to change the frame size. Changing the
input signal resolution may lead to interrupted streaming and recording. Enabling
this feature may not be suitable for systems where input resolution is changed
frequently.
To verify your frame size setting, click on the Live View menu option. The content is
displayed using the selected frame size
12. Check the Keep aspect ratio checkbox to preserve the source aspect ratio when scaling
56
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
If you choose to keep the aspect ratio of the source and your selected output frame size
aspect ratio is wider than the source aspect ratio, bars will appear on the sides of the video.
If the frame size aspect ratio is taller than the source, bars will appear at the top and bottom
of the output. See Control the matte (black bars) in the video output.
13. Click on the Key frame interval drop-down box to choose how often a key frame (a frame that contains
all the pixels) is used when streaming the video. The longer the key frame interval the smaller the video
file size, and vice versa. The higher the value the faster a user moves through the frames of the video
when using the search function of their media player. For more information on adjusting this feature to
reduce bandwidth and system resources, see Fine-tune channel configuration .
14. Change the Limit frame rate. The default should be adequate in most applications. While decreasing
the limit may improve system performance, you may need to test different values to balance video
smoothness and processing power.
15. Increase or decrease image quality by increasing or decreasing the target Bitrate value when H.264 and
MPEG4 codecs are used. Video with a high level of motion and high resolution, such as a sporting event,
requires a high bitrate.
Raising this value uses more system processing power and bandwidth.
16. Set the Quality parameter when the Motion JPEG codec is used to increase or decrease image quality.
This feature has the same behavior as the Bitrate value used for H.264 and MPEG4 codecs.
17. To configure the Show time label, see Creating a time stamp in the Customize your channel
18. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
5. If you're not sure which codec to pick, keep the default, H.264. For help selecting a codec, refer to Fine-
tune channel configuration
6. Keep the default video encoding preset and profile, or for help selecting these values, refer to Fine-tune
channel configuration
7. Scroll to the Video Channel section.
8. Select the Enable video channel check box, if not already selected.
Enabling this feature greys out the fields to change the frame size. Options for
an S-Video channel are based on SD camera resolutions, while DVI channels
have a wide range of frame size options.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
If you choose to keep the aspect ratio of the source and your selected output frame size
aspect ratio is wider than the source aspect ratio, bars will appear on the sides of the video.
If the frame size aspect ratio is taller than the source, bars will appear at the top and bottom
of the output. See Control the matte (black bars) in the video output
12. Click on the Key frame interval drop-down box to choose how often a key frame (a frame that contains
all the pixels) is used when streaming the video. The longer the key frame interval the smaller the video
file size, and vice versa. The higher the value the faster a user moves through the frames of the video
when using the search function of their media player.
For multiple source channels the key frame interval is configured in the DVIsection.
13. Change the frame rate limit. The default should be adequate in most applications. While decreasing the
limit may improve system performance, you may need to test different values to balance smoothness
and processing power.
14. Increase or decrease image quality by increasing or decreasing the Bitrate value when H.264 and MPEG4
codecs are used. The default bitrate is set to 4000 kbit/s.
Raising this value uses more system processing power and bandwidth.
15. To configure the Show time label, see Add a time stamp to your channel
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
9. Select a Picture in Picture layout to specify how each input source (DVI or VGA and S-video) is streamed.
Hardware limits the position of the S-Video picture to align with a multiple of 32 pixels. As a
result, it's possible there is a small gap between the DVI/VGAand S-Video streams, or that the
S-Video stream is not perfectly right-aligned when superimposed over the DVI/VGA stream.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
10. Click the Video signal type drop-down menu to specify if the video signal from the input source is
composite or S-video.
11. To choose a background color or to add a brand to your streaming video, see Customize your channel.
12. To set the frame size of the streaming video, see Upscale or downscale your video image
13. To add a timestamp to your streaming video, see Add a time stamp to your channel.
14. Click Apply.
To create independent streams (picture beside picture), follow the steps below.
When independent streams are published, audio is streamed with the DVI stream.
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin or operator.
3. From the web interface, scroll to the Channels menu option.
4. Click on the link for the channel you want to configure; the menu expands.
5. Click Stream Setup; a Stream setup window opens.
6. Scroll to the Video channel section.
7. Check the Enable video channel checkbox if the recording is a video signal from an analog source.
8. Select Independent streams layout to specify how the two input sources (DVI/VGA and S-video) are
streamed and recorded.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-1 Configure channels
Independent streams are supported when the codec value is H.264 and the Video encoding
profile value is Main or High. Otherwise the option is greyed out.
9. Click the Video signal type drop-down menu to specify if the video signal from the input source is
composite or S-video.
10. To choose a background color or to add a brand, go to Customize your channel.
11. To set the frame size of the streaming video, go to Upscale or downscale your video image
12. To add a timestamp to your streaming video, go to Add a time stamp to your channel.
13. Click Apply.
To enable or disable one of the independent streams (DVI channel or Video channel), follow the steps below.
1. From the web interface, click the Stream Setup option.
2. Check or uncheck the Enable DVI channel checkbox to enable or disable the DVI channel.
3. Check or uncheck the Enable video channel checkbox to enable or disable the video channel.
4. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
l Compression speed
l Image quality
For example, if you require a high quality image, the trade-off might be a larger file size, or slower compression
speed. If you require live streaming and therefore cannot tolerate slow compression, the trade-off might be a
lower resolution. The table below highlights the advantages and disadvantages of supported codecs.
Once you select video and audio codecs a list of available video format and standards specific to the selected
codec is generated and displayed. You can provide the URLs and files to participants to view the broadcast, see
Stream your video.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, click the Stream Setup menu option; the Stream setup configuration page
opens.
4. Click the Codec drop-down menu to change the size and speed of the compression and decompression
and the quality of the image. Choose one of the following options from the Codec drop-down menu.
Value Description
H.264 H. 264 is the default value and provides high quality video while using low
bandwidth. This is the preferred codec for the system.
Motion JPEG This is suitable for live streaming and video, however may have low quality images
while using high bandwidth. Motion JPEG does not support audio.
MPEG-4 This may be suitable for presentations. Provides good image quality, while using
moderate bandwidth.
5. Click Apply.
5. Choose one of the following codec options from the Audio format drop-down menu.
Value Description
MP3 MP3 is the default value and provides a common audio format for audio
storage. The 22 and 44KHz values define sound clarity. 44KHz provides higher
sampling of the analog signal.
PCM Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) is a standard for digital audio in computer and
other devices such as, digital telephone systems. The 22KHz and 44KHz values
define sound clarity. 44KHz provides higher sampling of the analog signal.
AAC This codec is comparable with MP3, and may have better sound quality with a
similar bit rate. The 16, 22 and 44KHz values define sound clarity. 44KHz
provides higher sampling of the analog signal. Most devices support AAC.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
Value Description
G.711 8KHz (a-Law) Used primarily in North America for streaming and recording voice. This codec
uses only 64kbps of bandwidth.
H.264 LPCM
H.264 G.711
H.264 MP3
H.264 AAC
MPEG-4 LPCM
MPEG-4 G.711
MPEG-4 MP3
MPEG-4 AAC
The following table displays the compatibility between the video/audio codecs and formats supported for
recording.
H.264 LPCM
H.264 G.711
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
H.264 MP3
H.264 AAC
MPEG-4 LPCM
MPEG-4 G.711
MPEG-4 MP3
MPEG-4 AAC
Default values have been carefully selected to provide maximum performance in most
environments. In most cases it is not necessary to change the encoding settings.
3. From the web interface, click Stream Setup; a Stream setup page opens.
4. Click Video encoding preset to define how a video stream is encoded. Choose one of the following:
Value Description
High quality Choose this option when you are streaming content such as slides or slow moving
video.
High speed Choose this option when you are streaming medium to fast moving video.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
5. Click Video encoding profile to limit or include video formats that are supported. Choose one of the
following:
Value Description
Baseline Choose this option when streaming to an application that requires robustness
and cannot tolerate data loss, for example video-conferencing.
Main Choose this option for standard-definition broadcasts. This is the default.
Default Choose this option when video is viewed for broadcast and disk storage
applications, particularly for high definition television application such as Blu-ray
disk storage format and HDTV broadcast service.
Video encoding profile and preset can be set when H.264 codec is selected.
6. Check the check box for Enhanced compatibility mode (h.264 slicing for RTP) to provide operating
stability when the video and audio stream are not supported by the viewers equipment. When this
feature is enabled, each frame is sub divided into one or more slices. Each slice is self-contained, all
information for decoding is available within the slice. This is valuable when packet size exceeds the
maximum allowable amount. Therefore losing a slice will not impact the entire frame.
Packet slicing adds to overhead and impacts compression efficiency. A value can be set
when H.264 codec is selected.
7. Set the Rate Control mode when H.264 and MPEG4 codecs are set. The values define how strictly the
codec adheres to the specified bitrate. Choose one of the following options from the Rate control mode
drop-down menu.
Value Description
Relaxed Choose Relaxed when streaming multimedia content and there is available
bandwidth, the quality of the multimedia stream must be constant and the bit
rate can vary.
Balanced Choose Balanced when streaming multimedia content that has periods of high
and low bit rates. The target bit rate is met by averaging the bit rate.
Strong Choose Strong when streaming multimedia content when limited bandwidth is
available and a constant frame rate is required. There may be a decrease in video
quality if there is a lot of motion.
8. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
The Lecture Recorder x2 conveniently provides a list of common aspect ratios and different frame sizes at each
ratio on the Stream Setup page.
For example:
The smaller frame size will downscale the image and use less bandwidth to transmit.
If you select a frame size that is not the same aspect ratio as your source, the result is one of having a matte
(bars) appear around the image, or the image is stretched. See Control the matte (black bars) in the video
output for details.
Resizing a video can be more resource intensive rather than leaving the video at a native
resolution. Although you can change the resolution at the Lecture Recorder x2 level, it is less of a
burden on your system resources if you can change the resolution at the source level. However if
that is not feasible, you can download an EDIDto the Lecture Recorder x2 to force the source to
send a specific resolution. See Force the video source to use a specific resolution .
To change the frame size of your video, follow the steps below.
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Click Stream Setup; the stream setup page opens.
4. Scroll to the frame size parameter.
5. Deselect Use current signal resolution as frame size, if it is selected.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
6. Choose a resolution from the links on the right, or type a frame size into the Frame size fields.
7. Click Apply.
The final frame size can be larger when Picture in Picture layouts are used.
For example:
l encoded resolution is 640480 (a 4:3 aspect ratio that is narrower than the input resolution)
Borders are added to the top and bottom of the image to preserve the wider ratio of the input.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
For example:
l encoded resolution is 1280800 (a 16:10 aspect ratio that is wider than the input resolution)
Borders are added to the left and right of the image to preserve the narrower ratio of the input.
The left and right side border are not guaranteed to be of equal width.
If you are seeing bars on your image but would rather have the image fill the whole screen you have to options:
1. Change the output frame size to match the aspect ratio of the input.
2. Stretch the image to fit the output frame size aspect ratio.
Match the output frame size to the aspect ratio of the source signal
To change the output frame size to match the aspect ratio of the source:
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Click the channel's Stream Setup; the stream setup page opens.
4. Scroll to the frame size parameter.
5. The simplest option is to select Use current signal resolution as frame size and click Apply. You can
alternatively select it briefly to note the current video signal resolution, then deselect it and follow the
steps below.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
6. Look for the source aspect ratio in the list of aspect ratios provided.
a. If the source resolution is on the list, choose another resolution on the same line(i.e. with the
same aspect ratio).
b. If the source resolution is not on the list, use a calculator to get a factor of the source resolution
and enter it in the Frame size fields.
7. Click Apply.
5. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, click Stream Setup; the stream setup page opens.
4. Select Keep aspect ratio.
5. Click Apply.
Unstretching the image causes a matte (black bars)to appear on the sides or top and bottom of
the output. To remove these see Control the matte (black bars) in the video output.
The device's ability to maintain a set frame rate is based on several factors, for example:
l overall system load affects the ability for the device to process pixels;
l available bandwidth;
l the resolution value;
l the type of motion that is captured; and
l number of users accessing the stream.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
When adjusting the frame rate, you may need to try different values to achieve the best outcome. The following
table provides the performance expectations when typical settings are used.
Table 16 Performance expectations
5. Click Apply.
Increasing the number of seconds between key frames can significantly reduce your bandwidth and system
resource usage with minor impact to your video quality. A good rule of thumb is to keep the interval between 2
to 3 seconds and decrease the key frame interval as the motion increases. Try different settings and note
changes in the video quality. If your video quality is poor and jittery you may need to decrease the interval
between key frames. If you have unlimited bandwidth and system resources you can choose an option to
stream key frames only.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-2 Fine-tune channel configuration
Choosing Key frames only option increases bandwidth and system resource usage.
74
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-3 Customize your channel
Using the Branding feature, you can also specify the following meta data that the media player displays for your
viewers:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-3 Customize your channel
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, select a channel, the menu expands.
4. Click on the Branding menu option; the configuration page opens.
5. From the web interface, click on the Branding menu option; the configuration page opens.
8. Select the file, the following file formats are supported: PNG, TIFF, JPEG.
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10. Click Upload; the file is uploaded and displayed in the Other files section.
11. Now you can apply the logo to a stream as well as add metadata information such as presentation title,
presenters name, and other corporate information.
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5. Enter metadata such as: presentation title, presenter name(s), any copyright dates and additional
information about the broadcast that you want the viewer to know.
How metadata is displayed depends on the media player. For example VLC stores the
metadata in a media information file, while other media players scroll the text
horizontally from right to left along the bottom of the media player window, similar
to a ticker message bar.
6. Perform the following steps for each broadcast channel (VGADVI or Video). If your broadcast layout is
picture in picture you may choose to add the logo to the VGADVI one stream only, or create a pared
down version for the video stream.
7. Click on the Image drop-down menu; a list of files appears. These are the files that you uploaded earlier
in an earlier procedure.
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9. Select where the image appears on the broadcast page using Position and Margin values.
b. Choose how far you want the image from the margin. For example if you chose the starting
position of left top and you want the image closer to the center of the broadcast page,
enter margin values to move the image.
If location settings are incorrect and display only part of the image; the system overrides the
incorrect settings and displays the whole image.
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7. Click Apply. Go to the live broadcast page to confirm the message location on the broadcast page.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-3 Customize your channel
b. Click Show substitutions; a list of options appears, from the list choose the format you want to date to
appear on the recording and type in the specific date and time. The following table describes the values.
date %F 2012-01-26
year %G 2012
month (01) %m 01
time %T 08:40:45
hour %k 08
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 3-3 Customize your channel
minute %M 40
second %S 45
8. Click Apply.
4. Scroll to Video channel. Picture in picture layout options are available when both VGADVI and Video
channels are enabled.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 4: Stream
PART 4: Stream
Streaming provides powerful and flexible approaches to delivering to your users. Offering an easy to use
interface, users can stream video using multiple formats to multiple users and devices such as web browsers,
media players, set-top-boxes, Smart TVs and Content Distribution Networks. The tool's flexibility is further
enhanced by its ability to support standard codecs used by most sharing destinations and media players.
This section discusses the following topic related to publishing your content:
l Stream your video
l Samples of stream settings
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To view the video formats and standards specific to your selected codec:
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, scroll to the Info menu option. The following page opens displaying the stream
protocol that is supported based on the selected codecs.
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The following table gives you a brief outline of the distribution options. A procedure to configure each
distribution option follows the table.
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Content Distribution Stream web content to many viewers simultaneously to any geographical
Network location. A viewer accesses the broadcast from a website using a user name
and password, if required. Using a CDN to host your broadcast is highly
scalable and makes financial sense to website owners since you do not pay
for additional server hardware or routing should your network traffic
increase or decrease.
For more information about streaming to a CDN, see Stream content using a
Content Distribution Network.
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Multicast Streaming Stream content to a multicast IP address where it can be shared with
multiple viewers within the same LAN. All viewers receive the same stream at
the same time. Similar to turning on a radio station, all listeners hear the
same music at the same time.
This delivery method is useful for training sessions, when there is a specific
timeframe when the audience will view the content. For more information
about using multicasting for streaming your content, see: Stream content
using multicast streaming
l RTP/UDP transport standard is used to stream H.264 video when
unicast or multicast streaming is used. Each viewer retrieves an SDP
file. SDP files can be stored on a streaming server, or opened by a
media player. For multicast, the destination address is
l MPEG-TS UDP transport standard is used to stream MPEG-4 video
when unicast or multicast streaming is used. Each viewer retrieves a
UDP address to add to their media player.
l MPEG-TS RTP/UDP transport standard is used to stream video when a
single port is used to stream video and audio via unicast or multicast.
Each viewer retrieves a RTP address to add to their media player.
This option can be used to stream video and audio to an IP TV or set top box
playlist.
To stream video outside of your LAN, use a CDN or configure port forwarding on your router. Refer
to your Network Administrator; network configuration is beyond the scope of this guide.
The Publish Stream feature is available when the H.264 codec is set.
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Serial URLs must be on the viewer's LAN for the viewer to use this option.
When a channel layout is configured as independent streams, the following values are used for
both streams.
To set the HTTP and RTSP streaming ports, follow the steps below.
1. From the web interface, click Stream Setup; a Stream setup page opens.
2. Scroll to Common settings.
3. Set the HTTP Streaming port to specify the port used to stream the HTTP broadcast. This value along
with the URL is used by viewers to access the broadcast.
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The port number must be higher than 500 for HTTP. In the case of RTSP streaming this value
is ignored.
4. Set the RTSP Streaming port when you are streaming live video. This value along with the URL is used by
viewers to access the broadcast. The default is 554.
5. Click Apply.
6. Jot down the URL address. This is the address you can send to viewers or to create a link to your
broadcast.
Users must install Bonjour Print Services on their Windows or Mac computer to access the live
Preview using the serial number. Log into the admin interface by IP address to see the URLwith the
IPaddress instead of the serial number.
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You can test how your content is streamed by sending your content to Epiphans CDN or choose one of
Epiphans preferred CDN providers http://epiphan.tv/cdn-partners.php.
Epiphan.tv is a service provided by Epiphan to help our customers to experiment with content
distribution networks, bandwidth, performance limits and viewer limits are applied. To upgrade to
a full service, select one of Epiphans preferred CDN provider at http://epiphan.tv/cdn-
partners.php.
To hear audio content from Epiphan TV ensure audio is set to MP3 in stream setup configuration.
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, scroll to the Publish Stream menu option. The Publish Stream page opens.
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6. Click Apply; connection through the media tunnel is established. The system streams to the Epiphans
portal epiphan.net.
You must set audio format to MP3 when streaming through epiphan.net, see Select an
audio codec.
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2. Choose a plug-in from the list, the stream is displayed using the selected multimedia player.
2. Click Embed on the bottom of the screen; a dialog box opens displaying the code.
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3. Highlight and right-click on the code in the dialog box. A drop-down menu appears.
4. Choose Copy.
5. Paste the content into the HTML code for your website. A link to your broadcast on Epiphan TV is added
to your web page.
2. Click Direct URLs on the bottom of the screen; a dialog box opens displaying a list of URLs for different
types of streams.
3. Use the copy and paste function to provide viewers with the URL to view the stream.
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11.
The CDN provider assigns a user name and password to authenticate the publisher.
Contact the CDN provider for your log in credentials.
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The CDN provider assigns a user name and password to authenticate the publisher. Contact
the CDN provider for your log in credentials.
4. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 supports multicast streaming content to an IP TV or a set-top box playlist when the file
format is MPEG-TS. The following procedures outline the steps to distribute your content using multicast
streaming.
When Independent Stream layout is configured the DVI Channel supports multicast streaming.
The Video channel is not streamed.
8. Enter the port number through which the video will stream.
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Both audio and video use adjacent ports (port and port+1). The minimum distance between audio
and video ports should 2.
9. Click Apply; an SDP file is generated and available from the Info menu option of the web interface.
10. Select a name and location for the SDP file and save it.
11. Share the link to the file with viewers.
l Video H.264
3. From the web interface, click the Publish Stream menu option; the Publish Stream page opens.
6. Enter the destination multicast IP address where the broadcast can be viewed.
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7. Enter the destination port number through which the media will stream.
8. Perform one of the following:
a. If you do not want to advertise your stream to a media player over a local network, go to the last
step of this procedure; or
b. To advertise your stream to a media player over a local network, follow the steps below.
9. Enable the SAP announcement checkbox to advertise your stream over a local network. When the
checkbox is enabled and a multicast IP address is configured, your stream is displayed in the playlist of
local media players.
10. Enter a multicast IP address in the SAP announcement IP field. If your media player is configured to
receive multicast streams from an IP address that is different from the default address 224.2.127.254, you
may need to contact your system administrator for a specific multicast IP address.
11. Enter a channel number in the Channel number field to identify your stream in the media player.
When a channel number value is not specified, viewers cannot select a channel from the set-
top box or Smart TV .
12. Enter a name for a group of streams in the text box next to Group name. Since media players simply
present a list of available streams, you can organize your streams into multiple folders or in cases where
folders are not displayed, use dot separator hierarchy to help your viewers filter out unwanted streams
by category.
13. Click Apply. To view the stream, open the URL in a media player, for example:
udp://@ip:port or in the case of the sample configuration in the figure shown above:
udp://@226.10.24.32:7000
To view the stream when SAP announce has been set and the stream is advertised from a media player,
set-top-box or Smart TV, refer to Viewing with SAP Announce.
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1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. From the web interface, scroll to the Publish Stream menu option. The Publish Stream page opens.
6. Enter the destination multicast IP address where the broadcast can be viewed.
7. Enter the destination port number through which the media will stream.
8. Perform one of the following:
a. If you do not want to advertise your stream to a media player over a local network, go to the last
step of this procedure; or
b. To advertise your stream to a media player over a local network, follow the steps below.
9. Enable the SAP announcement checkbox to advertise your stream over a local network. When the
checkbox is enabled and a multicast IP address is configured, your stream is displayed in the playlist of
local media player.
10. Enter a multicast IP address in the SAP announcement IP field. If your media player is configured to
receive multicast streams from an IP address that is different from the default address 224.2.127.254, you
may need to contact your system administrator for a specific multicast IP address.
11. Enter a channel number in the Channel number field to identify your stream in the media player.
When a channel number value is not specified, viewers cannot select a channel from the set-
top box or Smart TV .
12. Enter a name for a group of streams in the text box next to Group name. Since media players simply
present a list of available streams, you can organize your streams into multiple folders or in cases where
folders are not displayed, use dot separator hierarchy to help your viewers filter out unwanted streams
by category.
13. Click Apply.
14. Click the Info menu option of the web interface. An Info page opens displaying stream information.
To view the stream from a media player, open the URL in a media player, for example:
rtp://@ip:port or in the case of the sample configuration in the figure shown above:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 4-1 Stream your video
rtp://@226.10.24.32:7000
To view the stream when SAP announce has been set and the stream is advertised on a media player, set-top-
box or Smart TV, refer to Viewing with SAP Announce.
UPnP uses MPEG-TS over HTTP with the H.264 codec and MP3 or AAC audio encoding (or no audio). You can
only access live streams or recordings that meet these requirements.
For security reasons the default behavior prevents UPnP access to live streams and recorded files.
Some players will not be able to access the stream or saved recordings if a view password is set. If
needed, see Removing User Passwords to clear the viewer password.
The topics in this chapter include how to enable and disable UPnP and how to control media players from the
Lecture Recorder x2. To choose recordings or live streams from your media player, see Viewing with UPnP .
Enable UPnP
Enable UPnP to allow digital media players on the network to browse for media or live streams from your
device.
Streams and MPEG-TS recorded files must use the supported codecs: H.264 with MP3 or AAC
audio. Having a viewer password could prevent the ability to use UPnP.
To enable UPnP:
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1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Click the UPnP link in the Configuration section; the UPnP configuration page opens.
4. Enter a name in the Server name field. If no name is provided the server name will be the device's serial
number.
5. Select whether you want to share live video and recorded files.
6. Click Apply.
7. If no live stream is available that meets the criteria for UPnP, a message is displayed in the Play on
service start section of the page.
8. Otherwise, the Play on service start section shows a drop-down list of what can be streamed.
You can now browse for your server from your digital media player. See below.
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Disable UPnP
By default, UPnP sharing is disabled. If you enabled it for a particular broadcast, you may want to disable UPnP
sharing after the broadcast is complete. You can choose to disable access to live streams, recorded files, or
both.
To disable UPnP:
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Click the UPnP link in the Configuration section; the UPnP configuration page opens.
4. Deselect Share live video through UPnP to stop sharing live video.
5. Deselect Share recorded files through UPnP to stop sharing recorded files.
6. Click Apply; UPnPsharing is disabled.
Recorded files must be in MPEG-TS format and use the supported codecs: H.264 with MP3 or AAC
audio. Having a viewer password could prevent the ability to use UPnP.
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1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Click the UPnP link in the Configuration section; the UPnP configuration page opens.
4. Scroll to the Play on service start section.
5. Select a stream to use from the Live stream drop-down list.
6. Select a digital media player from thePlayer drop-down list.
7. Click Apply.
Only a single stream and player combination can be configured for auto play.
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To help you to achieve this balance the following tables list the recommended settings when streaming video
and slide content from a PC, Mac or tablet.
Quality Parameter 40
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 4-2 Samples of stream settings
Quality Parameter 80
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 5: Record
PART 5: Record
Your Lecture Recorder x2 encodes the video and audio it captures. If you choose to record the resulting
streams, it stores the recorded files on the device and provides a variety of automatic or manual mechanisms to
download the files.
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This section describes the following topics for creating and configuring recordings via the web interface.
l Control recording via the web interface
l Configure thetype and length of recording files
l Close the current recording file while recording
l Control recording with the big red button
l Control recording with on-device buttons
l Control recording with a USB keyboard or mouse
See Control with HTTPCommands and Control with RS-232 / Serial Port for information on controlling
recordings with third party tools. See File Maintenance to learn how to download the recorded files.
Recording can also be controlled via the tablet interface. See Control recording via the tablet
interface.
Recording basics
While recording a channel, a new file is created each time the maximum time or size limit is met. When
configuring these limits you can choose to have recording stop when there is no signal present in the sources.
See Configure thetype and length of recording files. This can be very useful to save disk space, but can cause
multiple files for a single session if the session involves switching presenters or input types.
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b. The device continues to record until it is stopped or the device runs out of storage space. The
recording is broken into multiple files as needed.
4. To Stop Recording:
You may find it useful to have recordings divided this way for ease of download, but you may also want to
change the recording limits to be larger or smaller to meet your individual situation.
Additionally you can configure the prefix for all recordings (the suffix is the date and time of the recording) and
you can exclude a channel or recorders recordings from automatic upload.
5. Select a time limit for the recording from the Time limit drop down.
6. Select a file size limit from the Size limit drop down.
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Tip: If you dont know what size to select, do some test recordings to get an idea of the file
sizes you can expect. If you want to guarantee the recording lasts to a given time limit, select
a file size that is far larger than you saw in your tests.
Tip: Its best to avoid spaces in file names. Use underscores or hyphens to separate words.
9. If desired, click the check box to stop recording if are no VGA/DVI or video signals.
10. Click Apply; the changes are saved and the recorder setup displays the new configuration.
The table below describes the options available for recording file configuration.
Table 19 RecordingFile Configuration Fields
Time limit Specifies the length of time the device waits before the recording file is saved and a new
one is started (assuming the size limit has not yet been reached). Values range from 5
minutes to six hours.
Size limit Specifies the file size a recording can become before it is saved and a new one is started
(assuming the time limit has not yet been reached). Values range from 50 MB to 4 GB.
Filetype Specifies the recording file type. Select from AVI, MPEG-TS, or MOV. Choose MPEG-TS for
UPnP playback.
Filename prefix Specifies how the recordings are named. Recording files start with the given prefix
followed by the date and time. The channel or recorder name is used if no prefix is given.
Allowed characters: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, _, , #, -, [], ().
Stop recording in Select this if you do not want to record when there is no VGA/DVI or video signal coming
the absence of into the device.
VGA/DVI and
video signals
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3. Click the Reset button next to the stop button; the current file is stopped and a new one begins.
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To toggle recording on/off with the right on-device button (assuming the button has its default
configuration):
1. Power on the device.
2. Attach sources and configure the device.
3. Press the recording button once to start recording; recording starts. If desired, check the web interface
to see that recording is started.
4. Press the recording button again to stop recording. If desired, check the web interface to see that
recording is stopped. See View the List of Stored Files
The Lecture Recorder x2 gives you the opportunity to change this button behaviour. You can disable the
button or make use of both buttons if you wish.
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When configuring one button to start recording and the other button to stop recording, set the Down actions
for the appropriate buttons. Down action is chosen so the recording starts or stops as soon as the button is
pressed, avoiding any delay that may happen before the button is released.
4. Pick Start Recording from the Down drop-down list for Right Button (or Left Button if you prefer to
have the left button start recording).
5. Pick Stop Recording from the Down drop-down list for Left Button (or Right Button if you set the left
button to start recording.)
6. Click Apply.
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The device supports keyboards with media buttons such as Play/Pause and Volume Up/Down or a mouse with
up to three buttons.
When configuring the mouse or keyboard for recording, set the Down actions. Down action is chosen so the
recording starts or stops as soon as the button or key is pressed, avoiding any delay that may happen before
the finger is released.
4. Pick Start Recording from the Down drop-down list for the desired mouse button or keyboard key
(from Enter, Play/Pause, Volume Up, or Volume Down).
5. Pick Stop Recording from the Down drop-down list for the desired mouse button or keyboard key
(from Enter, Play/Pause, Volume Up, or Volume Down).
6. Click Apply.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-2 File Maintenance
You can use a variety of methods to automatically transfer files from the device to local network storage.
Alternatively you can manually select individual recordings to transfer or delete. This section discusses the
following manual file management topics.
l View the List of Stored Files
l Rename Stored Files
l Download Files Manually
l Delete Files Manually
For information on automatic file transfers, see File and Recording Transfer.
5. Otherwise:
a. All files for this channel are listed, sorted by date.
Files that are part of the same recording session are listed one after another. Three dots appear
between files of different recording sessions. The file currently being recorded (if applicable) is
shown at the top of the list. It cannot be modified or downloaded until it has finished recording.
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To rename recordings:
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Go to the list of recorded files. See View the List of Stored Files.
4. Select the pencil and paper icon next to the filename you wish to change.
5. Type the new file name and press enter when finished.
The web interface keeps track of the filename extension (i.e. .avi) so you do not need to
include it when renaming the file.
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This procedure explains how to download files to your admin computer. See File and Recording Transfer for
information on transferring files to a USB drive connected to the device.
To delete recordings:
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1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin or operator.
3. Find the recordings by channel or by recorder. See View the List of Stored Files.
The list may not update immediately. You can refresh the list by reloading the Files Archive
page.
The list may not update immediately. You can refresh the list by reloading the Files Archive
page.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
Files are uploaded once (i.e. are automatically not re-uploaded during future sessions) and a log is kept
showing the file transfers. The first transfer occurs after the configured amount of time expires, or after the
current file completes recording.
Files saved before you complete automatic file upload configuration are not part of the automatic
upload. Manual file transfer is required for these files. See File Maintenance.
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The first transfer occurs after the specified amount of time expires, or after the current file completes
recording. I.e. if the value is set to every hour and five videos are saved the first hour, those five videos
are uploaded after the first hour, and one hour later the videos saved in the second hour are uploaded.
Name Description
On file rotation The device uploads each file after it stops recording it. You can control file size
and length to determine when files are done recording. You can also use the
reset button to close the current file and open a new one. See Create Recordings.
Every 6 hours The device uploads completed recordings every six hours.
6. Indicate the remote path, if desired. If no path is specified, the files are copied to the root folder of the
destination file system.
If the remote path does not exist on the remote server or USB drive, the file transfer fails.
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7. If desired, check Remove after upload to have the files deleted from local storage when upload
completes.
8. If desired, check Mark file as downloaded to have the color of the file link in the file archive list change
to show the files are downloaded. This only applies if the files are not deleted after upload is complete.
9. Select the protocol or destination for upload. The following table describes the options.
Table 21 Automatic FileUpload Interval Options
Name Description
RSync Client The device uploads to a network location using RSync to copy the file.
CIFSClient The device uploads to a network location using CIFS (also known as SMB or
samba) such as a shared folder on a Windows machine.
10. Follow the procedure below for configuring your selected protocol.
2. Specify the target Server address. If your device is configured with DHCP or has a valid DNS
configuration (see Configure Network Settings), you can use the servers fully qualified domain name
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3. Specify the Server Port used for the target FTP server. The standard port is 21.
5. Enter the FTP account password in the Password field; the characters are masked with dots.
6. Select Use temp file to name files with a temporary filename extension (.part) on the server until upload
is complete.
7. Click Apply; if there are any problems the system notifies you with a message: One or more parameter
values are not valid and those were not applied!
The following table describes the options applicable to configuring upload to an FTPserver.
Table 22 FTP Automatic Upload Configuration Options
Server address The IP address (or fully qualified domain name) of the FTP server.
Server port The port used by the target FTP server. Standard port is 21.
Use temp file Causes files to be named with .part extension on the server during active upload. When the
upload completes, the file is renamed to the appropriate extension (.mov or .avi).
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2. Specify the target Server address. If your device is configured with DHCP or has a valid DNS
configuration (see Configure Network Settings), you can use the servers fully qualified domain name
instead of the IP address.
3. Specify the Server module. This is the name of the shared folder on the server. If needed, request this
value from your network administrator.
4. Specify a username for the RSync Server in the Login field. The user must have write permissions for the
module.
5. Specify the password for the user in the Password field; the value is masked by dots.
6. If desired, select the Checksum check box to add a checksum validation to the transfer between the
device and the recipient server.
7. Click Apply; if there are any problems the system notifies you with a message: One or more parameter
values are not valid and those were not applied!
The following table describes the options applicable to configuring upload to an RSync server.
Table 23 RSync Automatic FileUpload ConfigurationOptions
Server address The IP address (or fully qualified domain name) of the RSync server.
Server module The name of the shared folder on the RSync server.
Checksum Select to enable checksum checking during file transfer. This increases the time taken to
transfer, but also increases reliability of the transfer.
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2. Specify the target Server address. If your device is configured with DHCP or has a valid DNS
configuration (see Configure Network Settings), you can use the servers fully qualified domain name
instead of the IP address.
3. Enter the target Server port, if you have configured the server to use something non-standard. Leave
this value blank to use the default port.
4. Specify the Server share. This is the CIFS share name or the name of the shared folder on the server. If
needed, request this value from the network administrator.
5. If the device is in a different domain than the server or if it is part of Active Directory, enter the Domain
name of the CIFS server.
6. Specify a username for the CIFS Server in the Login field. The user must have write permissions for the
share folder.
7. Specify the password for the user in the Password field; the value is masked by dots.
8. Select Use temp file file to name files with a temporary filename extension (.part) on the server until
upload is complete.
9. Click Apply; if there are any problems the system notifies you with a message: One or more parameter
values are not valid and those were not applied!
The following table describes the options applicable to configuring upload to a CIFS server.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
Server Port The CIFS server port. Leave blank to use the default port, or enter the port used for your
CIFS server.
Server address The IP address (or fully qualified domain name) of the CIFS server.
Server share The name of the shared folder on the CIFS server.
Domain The CIFS server's Windows domain or Work Group name . Needed if the server is part of
Active Directory or a DomainController.
Use temp file Causes files to be named with .part extension on the server during active upload. When the
upload completes, the file is renamed to the appropriate extension (.mov or .avi).
The external drive must be formatted with one of the following file systems:
File transfer to a USB drive occurs in one of the following ways. This section describes the procedures.
l One-Time Copy/Move of All Recorded Files to USB Drive
l Manually Copy Recorded Files to USB Drive
l View Available USBStorage Space
l Safely Eject the USBDrive
Only one copy or move toUSBoperation is permitted at a time, even though the UI may appear to
let you start a second one. Please wait until the first is complete before starting a new operation.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
The file currently being recorded (if any) cannot be transferred until recording is completed.
This procedure is separate from automatic file upload and does not need any pre-configuration in the
automatic file upload page.
Ideally only USB drives with visible activity indicators should be used. If your USB drive has no
activity indicator, you can check the greed LED on your Lecture Recorder x2. It blinks during
copy/move operations.
5. Select the appropriate check boxes based on the descriptions provided in the following table. If your
USB drive does not have activity indicators it is suggested you select either remove after copying or mark
file as downloaded.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
Name Description
create subfolder with If checked, the transfer process creates a sub-folder with the devices
serial number (<serial>) serial number on the USB drive. This is useful if you are using the same
drive to collect recordings from multiple devices and want to know which
device they came from.
remove after copying If checked, the file(s) are removed after being copied to the USB drive.
Checking this box makes the transfer a move instead of a copy.
mark file as downloaded If checked, the files that are downloaded are marked with a downloaded
icon when viewing file lists. This has no effect if remove after copying is
checked.
ignore already If checked, files that were previously marked as downloaded are not
downloaded files included in subsequent downloads.
If a conflict is reported regarding the Automatic file upload, go to the Automatic File Upload
configuration page and disable automatic file upload or switch it to a non-USB based
upload type. Repeat the steps above.
7. Insert the properly formatted USB drive into one of the devices USB ports; the drive is recognized and
the transfer begins. If the drive has an activity indicator light, it flashes during the transfer.Additionally,
the Lecture Recorder x2's green LED blinks to indicate copy/move operations.
8. When the activity light stops flashing, remove the USB drive.
9. If your USB drive does not have activity indicators:
a. Check the Files Archive for each channel and the Recorded Files list for each recorder to verify if
there are files that have yet to be copied.
b. Safely Eject the USBDrive when you are satisfied all files have been copied, or if you see the USB
drive is out of storage space (View Available USBStorage Space).
This procedure is separate from automatic file upload and does not need any pre-configuration in the
automatic file upload page.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin.
3. Select the External USB Drive link in the Configuration section; the External USB Drive configuration
page is displayed.
4. Select used to manually move/copy selected files via web interface from the drop down list.
If a conflict is reported regarding the Automatic file upload, go to the Automatic File Upload
configuration page and disable automatic file upload or switch it to a non-USB based
upload type. Repeat the steps above.
6. Click the Recorded Files button from the menu; the recorded files list opens.
7. Select the check box next to the files you wish to download. In the example below the topmost file is still
recording and cannot be downloaded.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
10. Repeat the steps to select a channel or recorder and copy or move files to the external drive until you
have copied all the files you wish. The green LED blinks to indicate copy/move operations.
11. Follow the steps to Safely Eject the USBDrive.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-3 File and Recording Transfer
2. Login as admin.
3. Scroll to the bottom of the Web Interface page; click the eject link below external storage space.
4. When prompted, click OK to confirm that you want to eject the USBdrive.
5. Disconnect the USBdrive from the device.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-4 Use the Local FTPServer
The ftp password is the regular access password for the selected user. See User
Administration for details on user names and passwords.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-4 Use the Local FTPServer
c. Click Apply.
5. To allow the FTP user to delete files:
a. Select the Enable FTP DELETE command check box.
b. Click Apply.
Any currently logged in ftp users must log out and back in again to have access to
the command.
Any currently logged in users will continue to have access to the delete command
until they log out and log in again.
The following table summarizes the options for configuring the local FTP server.
Table 26 FTPServer Configuration Options
Enable FTP access The check box controls whether or not the device acts as an FTP server. By default this is
disabled.
FTP user name Select one of the device users: admin, operator, or viewer. The ftp password will be the
access password for the selected user. By default the admin user is selected.
Enable FTP Controls whether or not FTP users can delete files. By default file deletion is not
DELETE command permitted.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-4 Use the Local FTPServer
In the example below, the IP address of the Lecture Recorder x2 is 192.168.1.210, the username is admin, there
is no password, and the Windows command line ftp utility is used.
6. Use get or your tools transfer mechanism to transfer files to your computer.
Figure 4-2 Download a file via FTP
7. If enabled in the FTP configuration page, delete the file after downloading it by issuing the delete
command, or using your tools delete mechanism.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 5-4 Use the Local FTPServer
If the delete command is not enabled, attempting to delete a file will result in an Unknown
Command error.
134
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 6: View
PART 6: View
Now that you have perfected your stream, identified the medium to publish your stream, it's time to view the
video stream from a media player or a web browser.
This section discusses the following topic related to viewing your content:
l View your video
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
View your broadcast using the Live View button on the main menu
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin or operator.
3. From the web interface, scroll to the Live View menu option. A window opens displaying the live
broadcast and stream URL.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
4. Copy the URL and provide to viewers.Based on their media player, viewers can access the broadcast
using a URL specific to their media player.
View your broadcast using the Live View button on the Info menu
1. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
2. Login as admin or operator.
3. From the web interface, click Info; the info page opens displaying the live broadcast and stream URL.
3. Click on the Live broadcast link; a window opens displaying the live broadcast and stream URL.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
4. Copy the URL and provide to viewers.Based on their media player, viewers can access the broadcast
using a URL specific to their media player.
When the single channel stream mode is enabled, this URL is used to view video from both DVI and
S-Video inputs.
3. Copy the URL and provide to viewers.Based on their media player, viewers can access the broadcast
using a URL specific to their media player.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
If the IP address of the broadcast is 172.20.1.33, then browse to: http:// 172.20.1.33
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
rtsp://96377.local:554/stream.sdp
For security reasons the default behavior prevents UPnP access to live streams and recorded files.
To enable UPnP, see Stream content using UPnP
Some players cannot access the stream or saved recordings if a viewer password is set. If needed,
see Removing User Passwords to clear the viewer password.
When browsing via UPnP your Lecture Recorder x2 is displayed by the server name you set, or it's product serial
number.
For example, when browsing from a Windows computer, you will see a list of media devices that includes the
Lecture Recorder x2:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
Live Streams
When you open the device from Windows Media Player, you'll see a list of the available channels you can stream
under the Videos tab. The channel name is VGADVI.From other digital media players, the channel list can be
under a Live Streams folder.
With Windows Media Player, double click to open any channel and press Play to start the stream. Using your
digital media player, select a live stream and press play.
RecordedFiles
Recorded files are shown in the Recorded Files folder. Files are organized by the channel or recorder from
which they were recorded. Windows Media Player shows the recorder files side by side with the channels and
other digital media players show the recorded files in a file tree format, see below.
UPnP can also be used to directly play a recording to the digital media player, or to set a media player to
automatically play a particular live stream after reboot of the Lecture Recorder x2. See Stream content using
UPnP and Auto-restart playback to a UPnPDevice.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
the video is streamed to their desktop, mobile or tablet. To configure SAP announce, go to Stream content
using multicast streaming.
Your Lecture Recorder x2 is advertised by the metadata title, if one was configured under Stream Branding,
otherwise it is identified by it's product serial number. For a description of how to set the metadata, refer to
Add your logo and company information to your channel.
When browsing from a VLC media player, streams are advertised by their product serial number and are
organized by the group name. When browsing from an XBMC media player, streams are advertised by the
stream's metadata title, if configured, otherwise streams are advertised by their product serial number.
1. Ensure the stream has SAP announcement enabled, otherwise it is not advertised in the media player's
playlist.
2. Ensure the SAP announcement IP is a multicast IP address.
3.
Some media players, for example Exterity receivers, listen for SAP announcements on a
specific multicast address 239.255.255.255. If your audience is using Exterity to view your
stream, you must change the SAP announcement IP address to 239.255.255.255.
4. Launch a media player. The following steps are based on a VLC media player and may be different for
other media players.
5. Click View from the menu; a drop-down menu opens.
6. Select Playlist. A Playlist window opens. The right-hand panel indicates the playlist is empty.
7. From the side menu, click Network streams (SAP). The playlist is populated with all streams in your
network that are SAP announcement enabled. If you specified a Group Name when you configured the
publish stream the stream will be listed in folder identified by the group name.
In the example below, two streams D2P83658.vga and D2P83658 are organized in a folder by their group name.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 6-1 View your video
8. Click on a live stream; the stream plays in the media player window.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide PART 7: Maintenance
PART 7: Maintenance
This section covers topics that will keep your Lecture Recorder x2 running smoothly. It also covers a new tablet
operator interface and ways to configure and operate your device using third party tools via HTTP or RS-232.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
The device connecting to the tablet interface must be on the same network as the Lecture
Recorder x2 or must be physically connected to it via USB.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
In the future you can go directly to the IP address above and login from the mobile interface without ever
seeing the usual admin interface.
See instructions below for installing the application. The iOS version is available from the Apple App Store and
the Android version, currently in beta, is available from the Epiphan web site.
To install the application on your iOS or Andriod device (perform this once):
1. Open the App Store (for Apple devices) or Google Play store (for Android devices).
2. Search for EpiphanConnect (all one word).
3. Download and install the free Epiphan Connect application.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
1. Once Epiphan Connect is installed, connect to the wifi network where you can access your Lecture
Recorder x2.
2. LaunchEpiphan Connect; the application searches your network and shows you a list of available
Epiphan devices.
3. Find your device in the list. If you have several Epiphan devices, look for the serial number of the one to
which you'd like to connect.
4. Select the device by touching the device name; a login prompt is presented.
5. Login as admin or operator; the tablet interface appears.
The top of the tablet interface gives you a warning if there are video inputs with no signal.In the example
below, 4 video inputs have no signal.
For more detailed information, you can look at each input individually.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
To monitor inputs:
1. Connect to the tablet interface. See Connect to the tablet interface.
2. Login as admin or operator.
3. Scroll to theINFO section; the currently available disk space is shown.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-0 Mobile / Tablet Operator Interface
150
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-1 Power Down and System Restart
5. Click OK.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-2 Save and Restore Device Configuration
The resulting backup file includes all non-default configuration settings for the device, except the
user passwords which are reset when a configuration is restored.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-2 Save and Restore Device Configuration
Configuration files are by default named <serial number>.cfg. You may have more than one configuration file
saved from the device. Select the correct configuration file and know where it is accessible from your local
computer before starting this procedure.
The resulting backup file includes all non-default configuration settings for the device, except the
user passwords. All passwords are reset to blank after the configuration is loaded.
6. Click the Restore button; the system configuration is restored and a new page appears asking you to
reboot the device.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-2 Save and Restore Device Configuration
7. Reboot the device by clicking the link in the message on the web page, or by using the power button on
the device; when the system comes back up the restoration is complete.
8. Login as admin(with no password).
9. Reset your user passwords. See Setting and Changing User Passwords.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-3 Restoring Factory Configuration
Restoring the factory settings erases everything on the device. This includes all your source
settings, channels, network settings, and all saved files.
4. Click the Restore button next to Restore Factory Configuration; a warning dialog appears asking you to
confirm the restoration.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-3 Restoring Factory Configuration
5. Click OK on the warning dialog; the device applies the factory configuration and reboots.
6. Wait for the system to reboot and begin re-configuration.
Restoring the factory settings erases all configuration items on the device. This includes all your
source settings, channels, and network settings. Recorded files are not erased.
The Lecture Recorder x2 has a factory reset button located on the front of the device. Refer to the image below
for the location of the button.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-3 Restoring Factory Configuration
3. Press and hold the Factory Reset button on the front of the device while you restore power to the
device; the blue LED illuminates.
4. Continue to hold the reset button until the blue light is extinguished and the green LED illuminates.
5. Release the reset button.
6. Wait for the system to reboot and begin re-configuration.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-4 Firmware Upgrade
If your Lecture Recorder x2 has internet access, you can check for updates directly by following the procedure
below.
Install firmware
When youve received a new firmware file from Epiphans support team, schedule a time where you can update
the firmware without negatively impacting viewers or file recordings.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-4 Firmware Upgrade
Installing new firmware takes a few minutes. Broadcasting and recording is not available until the
upgrade is complete.
There are two ways to install new firmware: from a the download link via the web interface, or from a file
provided by Epiphan.
Do not interrupt power to the device during the firmware upgrade. If power is lost due to
power failure, restore to the default factory settings before trying again. See Restoring Factory
Configuration.
7. When the firmware update is complete, the message lets you know it is going to reboot.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-4 Firmware Upgrade
8. Wait for the system to restart. Depending on the upgrade, a disk rebuild may be required, causing the
restart process to take much longer than usual.
9. Connect to the admin interface using your preferred connection mechanism. See Connect to the Admin
Interface.
10. Login as admin.
11. Select the Firmware Upgrade link in the Configuration menu; the firmware upgrade page opens.
12. Verify that the firmware version is the expected new version.
If the firmware upgrade failed, restore to the default factory settings before trying again. See Restoring Factory
Configuration. Once the upgrade is complete, load your saved configuration file.
Do not interrupt power to the device during the firmware upgrade. If power is lost due to
power failure, restore to the default factory settings before trying again. See Restoring Factory
Configuration
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-4 Firmware Upgrade
If the firmware upgrade failed, restore to the default factory settings before trying again. See Restoring Factory
Configuration. Once the upgrade is complete, load your saved configuration file.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-5 Remote Support
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-5 Remote Support
4. Click Enable remote support if the check box is not selected. This setting controls incoming links from
Epiphan.
5. Click Enable connection to maintenance server if the check box is not selected. This setting configures
outgoing links to Epiphan.
6. Ensure the server address is epiphany.epiphan.com, unless Epiphan support directs you to change it.
7. Ensure the port is 30, unless Epiphan support directs you to change it.
8. Click Apply.
9. Test that the device can access the maintenance server:
a. Select the Network link under Configuration.
b. Type epiphany.epiphan.com Network Diagnostics box.
c. Click ping.
d. Ensure the result shows an IP address for epiphany.epiphan.com and report any packet loss to
Epiphan support.
10. If the device cannot reach the maintenance server, check the network settings (see Configure Network
Settings) to ensure DHCP is selected or a DNS server is listed and try again. Consult with your network
administrator if problems persist.
11. If the device reaches the maintenance server, ensure your firewall, if you have one, has port 30 open for
the device.
12. Confirm with Epiphan support that they are able to access your Lecture Recorder x2 for remote
troubleshooting.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-5 Remote Support
Disabling remote support for the Lecture Recorder x2 removes the ability for Epiphan to reset a
lost admin password.
164
Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-6 Storage Disk Maintenance
If available storage is low, consider removing some unneeded recordings or setting up an automatic file
transfer with deletion after transfer. See File Maintenance and File and Recording Transfer.
Disk space can also be checked via the tablet interface. See Verify disk space via the tablet
interface.
4. If available storage is low, take action to remove files as discussed in File Maintenance and File and
Recording Transfer.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-6 Storage Disk Maintenance
For example, the restart setting is set to 50 and the months setting is set to 6. If six months pass and less than
50 restarts happened, a disk check will occur on the next restart. However if you do 50 restarts in one month,
the disk check will happen after the fiftieth restart.
Disk check occurs during start up and can cause a lengthy delay in starting up the device.
Running the disk check manually resets the timers for the scheduled disk check (i.e. next check wont happen
automatically until either the number of restarts or months passes).
If the device is recording when you start a disk check, it will stop recording and resume after the
check is complete. Frames presented during the disk check are not captured and are not part of
any recording.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-6 Storage Disk Maintenance
2. Login as admin.
3. Select the Disk Check link in the Configuration menu; the disk maintenance page opens.
4. Click the Check Now button; a new page opens showing you the progress of the disk check.
5. When the disk check is complete, the main page returns and a summary is shown.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-6 Storage Disk Maintenance
4. If using RAID 1 and one of the disks is down, the following warning is displayed.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-7 Control with RS-232 / Serial Port
The only configuration available for the serial port is flow control. Flow control changes the rate of data
transfer over the cable. Some communication settings are static and cannot be changed. The static settings
are:
l Baud rate set at 19200
l Parity set to none
l Stop bits set to one
Hardware A hardware handshake mechanism is used for flow control. This is also called RTS / CTS flow
control. Select this when your control terminal requires it (see control terminal manual).
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-7 Control with RS-232 / Serial Port
Software A software handshake that uses XON/XOFF characters to control the flow of data. Select this
when your control terminal requires it (see control terminal manual).
None No flow control is used. Only select this if your control terminal requires it (see control
terminal manual).
5. Click Apply.
The table describes the RS-232 commands supported by the Lecture Recorder x2.
Table 28 Supported RS-232 Commands
CommandName Description
Recording Commands
SNAPSHOT Takes a snapshot image (supported only if configured to use the Motion JPEG
codec). Snapshots are saved with recording files on the device.
SET.<key> Sets the value of a given parameter. The value is not saved until the SAVECFG
command is sent.
Status Commands
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-7 Control with RS-232 / Serial Port
CommandName Description
RECTIME Reports the elapsed recording time for the current file on each channel.
Additionally, the device reports its status changes back along the RS-232 connection using the following
messages:
Table 29 RS-232 Status Changed Messages
The Uninitialized status is sent when there is an internal error. Check the
device for more details.
For values with spaces, enclose the value in quotation marks. For empty values, use empty quotation marks
with nothing between.
1. To start recording:
START
2. To stop recording:
STOP
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-7 Control with RS-232 / Serial Port
GET.framesize
4. To set the frame size (resolution), enclose the parameter in quotes to preserve the spaces:
SET.framesize="640 x 480"
SAVECFG
SET.audio=on
SAVECFG
SET.audio=""
SAVECFG
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-8 Control with HTTPCommands
http://<address>/admin/get_params.cgi?key
http://<address>/admin/set_params.cgi?key=value
Where <address> is the IP address of the device, key is the key for the configuration item being checked or
changed (see the list in ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs ), and value is the value to set for the
configuration item.
For example, the key for product name is product_name and the key for firmware version is firmware_version.
To send a request for both the product name and the firmware version, use the following command:
http://<address>/admin/get_params.cgi?product_name&firmware_version
Or, to set the stream type (streamtype) to ASF and the bitrate (vbitrate) to 256,000:
http://<address>/admin/set_params.cgi?streamtype=2&vbitrate=256K
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-8 Control with HTTPCommands
The syntax for wget commands is shown below. Specify your devices IP address, password and the key(s) or
value(s) you wish to query. Note your system may require use of single quotes around the password to handle
special characters such as exclamation marks.
The examples assume a system IP address of 192.30.23.45 and admin password pass123.
2. To set the broadcast stream to ASF and at the title System Stream:
3. To start recording:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-8 Control with HTTPCommands
4. To stop recording:
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
When setting keys to values with spaces use the following syntax.
For RS-232:
For HTTP:
The following sections describe the API keys supported by the device in each of these categories:
l System-level Settings Keys(Read-only)
l System-level SettingsKey (Read/Write)
l Recording Configuration Keys
l ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
l IP-Based Access Control Configuration Keys
l UPnP Configuration Keys
l Frame Grabber Configuration Keys
l Broadcast ConfigurationKeys
l Channel Encoder ConfigurationKeys
l Channel Logo Configuration Keys
l Channel Layout Configuration Keys
l Audio Configuration Keys
l Stream Publishing Configuration Keys
l ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
l RTP/UDPConfiguration Keys (Publish Type 3)
l MPEG-TSConfiguration Keys (Publish Types 4 and 5)
l ContentMetadata Configuration Keys
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
The list of supported keys is also available for viewing from your device. Browse to the following URL (where
<address> is the IP address of the device):
http://<address>/admin/http_api.cgi
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
rec_timelimit integer Specifies the time limit, in seconds, before a new recording file is
created.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
phase 0...31 Specifies phase adjustments for VGAsignals. Generally not used
unless value is provided by Epiphan support.
Broadcast ConfigurationKeys
The following broadcast configuration settings are supported.
Table 37 Supported Broadcast Configuration Keys
rtsp_port 1000...65535, Specifies the port for RTSP streaming. Note port 5557 is used for
but not 5557 network discovery and cannot be used for streaming.
streamport 1000...65535, Specifies the port used for streaming. Note port 5557 is used for
but not 5557 network discovery and cannot be used for streaming.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
timelabel none (no date) Specifies the time label on the stream.
date (date alone) To have no time label, set to none.
hms (time alone)
date_hms (date and
time)
hms_ms (time to ms)
date_hms_ms (date
and time to ms)
slicemode on empty string ("") Enables or disables h.264 slicing for RTP. To enable slicing, set to
on. To disable slicing, set to empty string ("").
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
logo_margin_x 0frame width Specifies the horizontal offset in pixels from the position in
logo_position.
To offset 10 pixels from the left (when using a top-left logo
position), set to 10.
logo_margin_y 0frame height Specifies the vertical offset in pixels from the position in logo_
position.
To offset 20 pixels from the top (when using a top-left logo
position), set to 20.
logo_position lt Specifies the logo position on the screen (prior to tweaks from
lb margins x and y).
rt To have the logo at the left-top, set to lt.
rb To have the logo at the left-bottom, set to lb.
To have the logo at the right-top, set to rt.
To have the logo at the right-bottom, set to rb.
logo_src string Specifies the logo source file name. The file must already be
uploaded to the device.
bgcolor string (format: RRGGBB) Specifies the background color for video outside
the picture in picture modes.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
RATES:
32
64
96
112
128
160
192
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
publish_type 0 (do not publish) Specifies the type of stream publishing, if any.
1 (via Epiphan.tv)
2 (RTSP Announce)
3 (multicast RTP/UDP)
4 (multicast MPEG-TS
over UDP)
5 (multicast MPEG-TS
over RTP/UDP)
6 (RTMP push)
announce_by_tcp on Enables or disable RTSP over TCP. To enable TCP transport, set
empty string("") to on. Otherwise, set to empty string ("").
announce_host string Specifies the RTSP server address. Set to the appropriate IP
address.
announce_ string Specifies the password for the RTSP server's user.
password
announce_port 1000...65535, Specifies the RTSPserver port to connect to for streaming. Note
but not 5557 port 5557 is used for network discovery and cannot be used for
streaming.
announce_ string Specifies the username for the RTSP server. Value is provided by
username the RTSPserver.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
unicast_aport 1000...65535, Specifies the UDP port for RTP/UDP audio streaming. Note port
but not 5557 5557 is used for network discovery and cannot be used for
streaming.
unicast_vport 1000...65535, Specifies the UDP port for RTP/UDP video streaming. Note port
but not 5557 5557 is used for network discovery and cannot be used for
streaming.
unicast_mport 1000...65535, Specifies the UDP port for MPEG-TS streaming. Note port 5557 is
but not 5557 used for network discovery and cannot be used for streaming.
announce_host string Specifies the RTMP server address. Set to the appropriate IP
address.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-9 ConfigurationKeys forThirdParty APIs
announce_ string Specifies the password for the RTMP server's user.
password
announce_ string Specifies the username for the RTMP server. Value is provided by
username the RTMPserver.
author string Specifies the name of the author for the broadcast video. Refer
to description above on handling white space (spaces) in the
string.
copyright string Specifies the copyright for the broadcast video. Refer to
description above on handling white space (spaces) in the
string.
title string Specifies the title for the broadcast video. Refer to description
above on handling white space (spaces) in the string. (This
string can be displayed by certain viewing applications by
looking at the stream's metadata information.)
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-10 Troubleshooting
7-10 Troubleshooting
Use the follow table for help if you are experiencing problems or unexpected behavior from your Lecture
Recorder x2.
Not sure if the connected video inputs are Look at the device's LEDlights. If the red light is blinking, signal
being captured. is being received.
OR
Check each source's input from the source preview in the Web
Interface. See Configure a video source.
No sound is coming from an audio Verify that you are using the correct audio input by following
source. the steps in Configure an audio source.
Too much noise is present in the audio Modify the Input Amplifier Volume parameter in the Audio
output. menu. Start with setting it to 40% and reduce until the noise is
no longer present. See Set audio volume for details on this
setting.
Image quality is poor or insufficient. The following tips can help improve image quality:
1. Ensure the source resolution is used as the output or
recorded resolution. Up-scaling and down-scaling can
affect picture quality. See Upscale or downscale your
video image.
2. Increase the Bitrate value and/or decrease the Limit
frame rate value in the Stream Setup menu. See Adjust
video quality .
Frames per second are lower than The following tips can help improve frames per second (fps):
expected.
1. Increase the Limit frame rate value and/or decrease the
Bitrate value in the Stream Setup menu. See Adjust video
quality .
2. Reduce the number of actions happening simultaneously
on the device(i.e. if streaming, recording, and copying
files, consider waiting to copy files until after streaming
and recording are complete).
3. Enter a low negative value (i.e. -5) in the Frame Grabber's
Vertical Shift field.
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Lecture Recorder x2 User Guide 7-10 Troubleshooting
Stream won't play in my media player or Check the LEDs on the System to ensure data is being recevied.
browser. The greenLED should be illuminated and the red LEDblinking. If
the broadcast is being recorded, the blue LED blinks too.
Verify that the Stream Type matches with the media player used
and that you have the correct url or SDP file for the player. See
Viewing with a web browser and Viewing with a media player.
If you still cannot see the stream, try disabling your local
computer firewall.
The stream interrupts or the image The following tips can help diagnose image problems:
breaks up.
1. Ensure the source resolution is used as the output or
recorded resolution. Up-scaling and down-scaling can
affect picture quality. See Upscale or downscale your
video image.
2. Increase the Bitrate value and/or decrease the Limit
frame rate value in the Stream Setup menu. See Adjust
video quality .
3. Check network settings including filters, routers and
application settings. Packet loss can result in stream
failure.
Recording issues. If recording will not start, check the Disk Status Information to
see if the device is out of disk space. See Check disk storage
space and File Maintenance.
Firmware upgrade fails. Reboot the device and try again. If the problem persists, contact
Epiphan support at [email protected].
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PART 8: Releases and Features
This section outlines the features introduced with each product release.
Additionally, the Web Interface now shows you the available free space on your inserted USBdrive.
Audio Features
Audio inputlevel meter
Audio inputs that have an incoming signal and are part of a configured stream now have an audio signal level meter on
the stream information page.
The new mobile interface also displays the audio input level meter.
Auto Settings
Automatic selection frame size using signal resolution
To assist with stream setup, stream frame size is now configured by default with the input signal's resolution and will
follow the signal's changes of resolution.
If the input signal changes, streaming and recording is stopped and restarted. Deslect Use current signal resolution
as frame size if your input resolution will change often and you don't want streaming or recording to stop and restart
with each change.
Mobile tethering
Release 3.11.0 introduces the option to use mobile tethering for recording control, confidence monitoring and mobile
network file transfers. Configure mobile data tethering and turn on automatic file uploads to automatically transfer
files to a remote site using the public mobile network. Alternatively, choose to tether for confidence monitoring and
recording control only.
Configure the Lecture Recorder x2 to use no mobile data, to use Ethernet normally and switch to mobile data if the
Ethernet becomes unavailable, or to mobile data as the preferred transmission method.
Other Improvements:
l Starting with release 3.11.0, you can customize the prefix used for recorded files. Use this to identify files being
auto-uploaded from various rooms at a conference, or to keep track of which source is being recorded. See
Configure thetype and length of recording files
l Customize the buttons on your Lecture Recorder x2. Select the action for the two buttons on the front of the
device, and for attached USB mouse or keyboards.
l Inputs that have an incoming signal and are part of a configured channel can be previewed on the Stream
Setup page. A static screenshot is shown and can be updated manually by clicking reload screenshot.
l Encode SVideo input without DVIor VGA input. You can now enable or disable the VGADVIinput on your
Lecture Recorder x2. When disabled the S-Video input will be the only source used for the resulting stream. By
default VGADVI is enabled, and it is always the primary input if both inputs are enabled. Disable it from the
Stream Setup page.
l MPEG-TS format recording. This robust encoding mechanism has no index or trailer structures making it the
most fault tolerant format supported by the Lecture Recorder x2. MPEG-TS files are ready for streaming over
HTTP, RTP and UDP.
l Ensuring multiple sources are synchronized and time-stamped precisely is easier than ever. with support for
PTP time synchronization.
l H.263 (an older Flash implementation) is replaced with MPEG-4. As of Flash Player 9, update 3 (in December
2007),Flash supports H.264 encoding. If H.264 does not suit your needs, you can still support older players with
the MPEG-4 codec. The exact codec supported is MPEG-4 Advanced Simple Profile.
Software and Documentation License
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The equipment that you bought has required the extraction and use of natural resources for its production. It
may contain hazardous substances that could impact health and the environment. In order to avoid the
dissemination of those substances in our environment and to diminish the pressure on the natural resources,
we encourage you to use the appropriate take-back systems. Those systems will reuse or recycle most of the
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2. This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired
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Marking by the symbol indicates compliance of this device with EMC directive of the European Community
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197
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198
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