Video Standard:
Here you can choose between PAL and NTSC. PAL is used in Western Europe and
Australia, NTSC is used in the US, Canada and Japan. If the NVR’s picture is black and white, flickering or
similar, then this is probably caused by the video system being set incorrectly.
Time Zone:
Particularly important if you’ve enabled NTP - set this to the time zone where you happen to
be. For example, people in eastern Australia (Canberra, Sydney and Melbourne) choose GMT+10:00,
whilst the Eastern Time zone in the USA and Canada is GMT-05:00. (GMT stands for Greenwich Mean
Time - it’s the baseline that keeps all the different time zones in sync.)
Date Format:
The format of the date (eg. DD/MM/YYYY or MM/DD/YYYY and so on).
System Time:
This can be edited manually, or set to update automatically by using NTP
Synchronize Local time
: After click this button , NVR time will sync with local PC time .
DST Setting:
As the standards for daylight savings differ from country to country, and often state to state,
you might need to manually tell the NVR exactly when it commences and ends in your locality. First, turn
DST on. We suggest setting the
Daylight Saving Time Mode
to
Date
, and manually entering the dates
and times that daylight savings time applies to and from, in your locality.
Note:
Some NTP servers are NOT fully compatible with DST. This may cause your system to double-count
adding one or removing one more hour than they should, or cancel each other out. You may need to
intentionally change your time zone to compensate, or simply not use NTP and DST simultaneously.
Enable Password:
When enabled, the NVR will require a password to access, even for local users. It’s
advisable to enable password protection
Device Name:
Differentiates your NVR from other devices. If you don’t have any other NVR’s or similar
devices, then you can leave this as-is. If you’ve got multiple NVRs running on the same network, then it’s a
great idea to give each a unique ID.
Device Setting -> System -> General
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