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robert

digital PTZ - what is it? how?

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"Axis camera also features a built-in electronic PTZ (pan/tilt/zoom) function"

 

I still cant understand - if you dont have mechanical parts, how can you pan/tilt? Can anybody explain please.

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Most IP cameras do something like this... means that it lets you digitally zoom in on a portion of the total recorded image. Basically it just crops a small area of the picture and expands it to fill the original full frame (the "zoom" part), and then lets you move the crop area around (the "pan/tilt" part).

 

For example, take a look at this 1.3MP (1280x1024) original (NOTE: I've drastically increased the JPEG compression on these images to keep the sizes down, but the quality will suffer somewhat):

92435_1.jpg

 

Now this is a 640x512 crop, resized to 1280x1024, which is effectively a 2X zoom factor:

92435_2.jpg

 

And this is a 320x256 crop of a different area, again resized to 1280x1024, which makes it look like a 4X zoom.

 

92435_3.jpg

 

When you're doing in in-camera, the software allows you to adjust the crop amount and move the cropped area around in real-time, thus simulating "PTZ" functionality.

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You are star - thanks.

 

But they could have called it just - digital zoom, otherwise it sounds a bit misleading as there is no Pan or Tilt function, just a zoom. PTZ means you can rotate camera around.

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The term "digital zoom" is used more often with point-and-shoot digital cameras, and is generally regarded as little more than marketing BS, as you can do the same job in software later, usually with better results. It's also usually limited to the center area of the frame.

 

This would probably be better termed "simulated PTZ", since it's not JUST zoom.

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You can get some cameras, that record a fisheye view (180 or 360 degree lens) that then use software to allow you to view different areas of the footage on playback. Its like being able to pan/tilt after the event has happened.

 

IPIX commandview is the only one I have tried, there are quite a few (more modern probably) on the market. Not cheap though.

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