Play a recording, P. 98), Search by event – Canon VB-M700F User Manual
Page 98
98
Search by Event
Click [Search] on the toolbar or [Search] on the timeline
toolbar to search for an event. Click the event in the
search results to play the associated recording. For
details, see “Play Back an Event” (p. 106).
Play a Recording
Use the playback controls on the timeline to control the
video displayed in the video window.
(1) Playback controls
Controls for video playback.
(2) Event display area
Click to move the playhead to the playback position.
(3) Playhead
Drag the playhead to change the playback position.
Video Window Display for Playback
(1) Playback indicator
Displays the playback status.
(2) Title bar
Displays the camera name and the time and date of
the recording.
Note
• You can play recordings from more than one camera at the
same time.
• You can display recordings from one camera in multiple video
windows. You can also play video recorded at different times
simultaneously.
• Click [Live] on the timeline toolbar during playback to return to
the live video.
Button
Description
Jump to previous event
Fast reverse (each click changes the
speed in sequence: 1x, 2x, 5x, 10x)
Go to previous frame
/
Play/pause
Go to next frame
Fast forward (each click changes the
speed in sequence: 2x, 5x, 10x)
Jump to next event
(1)
(2)
(3)
(1)
(2)
Important
• You cannot use [Fast Reverse], [Previous Frame], and [Next
Frame] for recordings in MPEG-4 or H.264 format.
• Because video data is being sent from the Storage Server to
the Viewer during playback, playback response and
smoothness depends on factors such as the amount of
network traffic.
• The time displayed on the timeline corresponds to the clock
on the computer where the Viewer is running.
• To play back a recorded video, set a time earlier than the
current time that will allow recording 10 frames*. If you try to
simultaneously record and play back video before 10 frames
have been recorded, playback may be momentarily
interrupted.
* At a recording frame rate of 0.1 fps, 10 frames takes
100 seconds.
At a recording frame rate of 1 fps, 10 frames takes
10 seconds.