The process of viewing and/or recording live images and video footage from a remote location, typically for surveillance purposes.
This allows an off site user to monitor surveillance camera feeds, so a user can survey a site regardless of their location from it. The transfer of data from camera to user can be either over the Internet or the Ethernet, with IP cameras being suited to the task.
The monitoring of applications and infrastructure outside of CyrusOne's data center. See Enterprise Management.
SNMP specification for multivendor statistics-gathering by a standards-based (de facto SNMP) management station from de facto standard (RMON)-compliant devices.
Remote Monitoring refers to utilizing the Internet to view streaming video from an off site computer.
A network management technique which relieves the NMS of certain monitoring duties by using a monitor to observe a specific LAN segment and report back to the NMS.
Part of the MIB that is used in SNMP. RMON defines 9 types of information that can be used to monitor networks and network devices. RMON2 is an extension...
Creative's WebCams are powered by our award winning Creative WebCam Center software, which allows for Remote Monitoring. You can capture images of your home or office while away, and upload these to a website easily.
Standard providing packet collection, decoding, and analysis to a layer of the operating systems interconnection stack, using a combination of consoles, hardware and software probes that rely on SNMP MIB data collection. The combination of RMON and SNMP provides powerful network diagnostic tools that facilitate multi-vendor interoperability.
Observing or recording a process or condition from a distance, without affecting the process or condition itself. For example, one might monitor the status of lights, weather conditions, and access gates at a radio tower located some distance away from the monitoring station. Opto 22's SNAP PAC System is especially suited to remote monitoring because it offers distributed intelligence and scalability. Distributed intelligence: The I/O unit at the remote site contains an intelligent communications and I/O processor, such as a SNAP PAC R-series controller. The controller not only monitors and controls local conditions, it also communicates with the monitoring station using PPP over a standard modem connection and ordinary phone lines. It can even be monitored along with other network hardware using an SNMP-based network management system. Scalability: Additional remote sites can be easily added as necessary. Adding a distributed I/O unit in a new location doesn't disturb the existing system.