If your alarm handling view contains one or more map positions, you can view alarms on the maps too. Maps display alarms based on the geographical location of the camera, server or other device triggering the alarms, so you can instantly see where the alarm originates from. You can right-click and acknowledge, disable, or suppress the alarm directly from the map.
Camera elements display video in thumbnail format when you move your mouse over it. When used together with alarms, the graphical elements on maps display white circles around them if alarms occur. For example, if an alarm associated with a particular camera occurs, the graphical element representing that camera will immediately get a white circle around it (1 in the following illustration), and you can then click the camera element and not only view video from the camera, but also handle the alarm through a menu that appears.
Tip: If white is not an ideal color for signifying alarms on your maps, you can change this color.
Now, say the camera which has an alarm associated with it, is located on a street level map, but you are viewing a city level map. How will you then notice the alarm? No problem, thanks to hot zones—graphical representations linking different map hierarchy levels together. If an alarm is detected on the street level map, the hot zone on the city level map will then turn white (2 in the following illustration), indicating that there is an alarm on a lower level map—even if there are map levels in between.
To return to an alarm list mode where you can see alarms from more than just the one element, click the required server, priority or state in the alarm list.
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