Planet ICA-HM230 User Manual

H.264 Mega-Pixel CMOS
PT Internet Camera
ICA-HM230
User’s Manual
Version: 1.00
Date: May. 2009
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Copyright
Copyright © 2009 by PLANET Technology Corp. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language or computer language, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic, optical, chemical, manual or otherwise, without the prior written permission of PLANET. PLANET makes no representations or warranties, either expressed or implied, with respect to the contents hereof and specifically disclaims any warranties, merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. Any software described in this manual is sold or licensed "as is". Should the programs prove defective following their purchase, the buyer (and not PLANET, its distributor, or its dealer) assumes the entire cost of all necessary servicing, repair, and any incidental or consequential damages resulting from any defect in the software. Further, PLANET reserves the right to revise this publication and to make changes from time to time in the contents hereof without obligation to notify any person of such revision or changes.
All brand and product names mentioned in this manual are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of their respective holders.
Federal Communication Commission Interference St atement
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
1. Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
2. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
3. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
4. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio technician for help.
FCC Caution
To assure continued compliance. (example-use only shielded interface cables when connecting to computer or peripheral devices). Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the Following two conditions: ( 1 ) This device may not cause harmful interference, and ( 2 ) this Device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
Federal Communication Commission (FCC) Radiation Exposure Statement
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure set forth for an uncontrolled environment. In order to avoid the possibility of exceeding the FCC radio frequency exposure limits, human proximity to the antenna shall not be less than 20 cm (8 inches) during normal operation.
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Safety
This equipment is designed with the utmost care for the safety of those who install and use it. However, special attention must be paid to the dangers of electric shock and static electricity when working with electrical equipment. All guidelines of this and of the computer manufacture must therefore be allowed at all times to ensure the safe use of the equipment
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CE Mark Warning
This is a Class B product. In a domestic environment, this product may cause radio interference, in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.
WEEE Regulation
To avoid the potential effects on the environment and human health as a result of the presence of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment, end users of electrical and electronic equipment should understand the meaning of the crossed-out wheeled bin symbol. Do not dispose of WEEE as unsorted municipal waste and have to collect such WEEE separately.
Revision
User’s Manual for PLANET H.264 Mega-Pixel CMOS PT Internet Camera Model: ICA-HM230 Rev: 1.0 (May. 2009) Part No. EM-ICAHM230
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Table of Content
1. Introduction................................................................................................................ 6
1.1 Overview............................................................................................................. 6
1.2 Features .............................................................................................................. 6
1.3 Package Contents............................................................................................. 7
2. Basic Setup ............................................................................................................... 8
2.1 System Requirements....................................................................................... 8
2.2 Physical Description.......................................................................................... 9
2.2.1 Front Panel.............................................................................................. 9
2.2.2 Rear Panel ............................................................................................ 10
2.3 Hardware Installation ...................................................................................... 11
2.3.1 Ceiling Mount ........................................................................................ 11
2.3.2 Wall Mount............................................................................................. 12
2.3.3 Physical Installation .............................................................................13
2.4 Initial Utility Installation ................................................................................... 14
2.5 Preparation....................................................................................................... 16
2.5.1 Search and View by IPWizard............................................................ 16
Search.............................................................................................................. 16
View .................................................................................................................. 17
2.5.2 Configure Network by IPWizard......................................................... 17
2.6 Using UPnP of Windows XP or Vista ........................................................... 19
2.6.1 Windows XP.......................................................................................... 19
2.6.2 Windows Vista ...................................................................................... 24
2.7 Install the Device behind a NAT Router....................................................... 25
2.8 Setup ActiveX to use the PT Internet Camera............................................ 26
2.8.1 Internet Explorer 6 for Windows XP .................................................. 26
2.8.2 Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP .................................................. 27
2.8.3 Internet Explorer 7 for Windows Vista............................................... 28
3. Web-based Management...................................................................................... 29
3.1 Introduction....................................................................................................... 29
3.2 Connecting to PT Internet Camera............................................................... 29
3.3 Live View........................................................................................................... 31
3.4 ActiveX Control ................................................................................................ 34
3.4.1 Digital Zoom .......................................................................................... 35
3.4.2 Record.................................................................................................... 35
3.4.3 Snapshot................................................................................................ 36
3.4.4 Voice....................................................................................................... 36
3.4.5 Statistics................................................................................................. 37
3.4.6 About ......................................................................................................37
3.5 Network Configuration .................................................................................... 38
3.5.1 Network.................................................................................................. 38
3.5.2 DDNS server......................................................................................... 40
3.5.3 PPPoE.................................................................................................... 41
3.5.4 Streaming .............................................................................................. 42
3.5.5 UPnP ...................................................................................................... 44
3.5.6 IP Filter................................................................................................... 45
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3.5.7 IP Notification........................................................................................ 46
3.6 Camera Configuration..................................................................................... 48
3.6.1 Picture .................................................................................................... 48
3.6.2 Preset Setting ....................................................................................... 50
3.6.3 Tour Setting ...........................................................................................50
3.7 System............................................................................................................... 52
3.7.1 System ................................................................................................... 52
3.7.2 Date & Time........................................................................................... 53
3.7.3 Maintenance.......................................................................................... 54
3.8 Video.................................................................................................................. 56
3.8.1 Common ................................................................................................ 56
3.8.2 H264 Profile........................................................................................... 57
3.8.3 MPEG4 Profile ...................................................................................... 58
3.8.4 MJPEG Profile ...................................................................................... 59
3.9 Audio Configuration......................................................................................... 60
3.10 User Privilege Access Configuration.......................................................... 61
3.11 E-Mail Configuration...................................................................................... 62
3.12 Object Detection ............................................................................................ 63
3.13 Event Server Configuration.......................................................................... 64
3.13.1 FTP Server.......................................................................................... 64
3.13.2 TCP Server.......................................................................................... 65
3.13.3 HTTP Server....................................................................................... 66
3.13.4 SAMBA Server.................................................................................... 67
3.14 Event Schedule Configuration..................................................................... 68
3.15 Record Configuration.................................................................................... 71
Appendix A: Reset Factory Default Settings.............................................................. 72
Appendix B: PING IP Address...................................................................................... 73
Appendix C: 3GPP Access ........................................................................................... 74
Appendix D: Bandwidth and Video Size Estimation ................................................. 75
Appendix E: DDNS Application.................................................................................... 76
Appendix F: Configure Port Forwarding Manually .................................................... 81
Appendix G: Power Line Frequency ........................................................................... 84
Appendix H: Troubleshooting & Frequently Asked Questions ................................ 85
Appendix I: Product Specification............................................................................. 90
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1. Introduction

Thank you for purchasing the H.264 Mega-Pixel CMOS PT Internet Camera. It is versatile and high image solution of surveillance application for day and night. The ICA-HM230 is also a stand-alone camera system with a built-in processor and web server that provides highest quality video and system performance.
The PLANET Internet camera support Multi-Profile function can stands for simultaneously video streams. These Network Cameras can generate H.264, MPEG-4 and M-JPEG streaming simultaneously to different clients. Moreover, the resolution can be different from one client to another. This state-of-art design is considerable to fit in various network environments.

1.1 Overview

This user’s guide explains how to operate this camera from a computer. User should read this manual completely and carefully before you operate the device

1.2 Features

1.3Mega-Pixel CMOS sensor built-in
Offers pan range of 355-degrees and tilt range of 100-degrees to control over network.
2-way audio with built-in microphone and additional external speaker
4 white-light LEDs visible distance up to 10 meter at night
Multi-profile encoder supports H.264 / MPEG-4 and M-JPEG video compression
simultaneously
3GPP for 3G mobile remote applications
Plug-N-Watch is able to simplify system integration in existing network environment
Store-to-NAS function for save video files without operating software
Easy configure and manage via Windows-based utility or web interface
DDNS, PPPoE and FTP uploading supports more alternatives in surveillance network
Motion Detection: the motion detection feature can monitor any suspicious movement in
specific area
Compliant with IEEE 802.3af standard PoE interface
Cam Viewer Plus - Central management software supported
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1.3 Package Contents

User can find the following items in the package:
PT Internet Camera x 1
Power Adapter x 1
Camera Mount Kit x 1
User’s Manual CD x 1
Quick Installation Guide x 1
NOTE:
1. If any of the above items are missing, please contact your dealer immediately.
2. Using the power supply that is not the one included in Internet camera packet will cause damage and void the warranty for this product.
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2. Basic Setup

This chapter provides details of installing and configuring the ICA-HM230

2.1 System Requirements

Network Interface 10/100MBase-TX Ethernet
Monitoring System Recommended for Internet Explorer 6.0 or later
System Hardware · CPU: Pentium 4, 3.0GHz or above
· Memory Size : 512 MB (512 MB or above Recommended )
· VGA card resolution : 1024 x 768 or above
· VGA card memory : 64 MB or above
(at least 128 MB for Megs-pixel resolution)
· Network bandwidth: In VGA resolution mode, minimum upload bandwidth is 1Mbps.
NOTE:
The listed information is minimum system requirements only. Actual requirement will
vary depending on the nature of your environment.
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g

2.2 Physical Description

2.2.1 Front Panel

High-light LED
Lens / Focus rin
Microphone
Power LED
High-Light LEDs
Lens / Focus ring User could use this ring to adjust focus manually.
LAN LED
Power LED
Microphone
These LEDs are white-light type. It’s very useful for low-lux environment to provide supplementary light source for image sensor
This LED is used to indicate whether DC power is on or not. In addition, this
LED will be flashing while network accessing via Ethernet.
This LED is used to indicate whether DC power is on or not. In addition, this LED will be flashing while the wireless accessing of the Camera.
The Camera has built-in an internal microphone. This microphone is hidden in the pinhole located on the front panel.
LAN LED
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2.2.2 Rear Panel

DC Power Jack
Audio Output Jack
Factory Default Reset
LAN Socket
Audio Output Jack
DC Power Jack
LAN Socket
Audio-out Jack allows this device to output audio or alerting sound.
The input power is 12VDC.
NOTE
The LAN socket is a RJ-45 connector for connections to 10Base-T
Ethernet or 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet cabling. This Ethernet port built
N-Way protocol can detect or negotiate the transmission speed of the
network automatically. Please use Category 5 “straight through” cable
to connect the Internet camera to a 100Mbps Fast Ethernet network
switch or hub. The LAN socket is compliant with IEEE802.3af standard
PoE interface.
NOTE If you need to connect the device to PC or notebook directly,
Only use the power adapter supplied with Internet camera. Otherwise, the product may be damaged.
When this device is powered by PoE, you don’t have to connect the power adapter to this connector.
you should use cross over cable instead.
Factory Default Reset
This button is hidden in the pinhole. Please refer to the Appendix A in
manual for more information.
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2.3 Hardware Installation

2.3.1 Ceiling Mount

1. Fix the camera to L-type bracket with two supplied screws.
2. Fix the bracket and camera to the ceiling using two holly wall anchors and screws.
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2.3.2 Wall Mount

1. Fix the L-type bracket to the wall using two holly wall anchors and screws.
2. Fix the camera to L-type bracket with two supplied screws.
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2.3.3 Physical Installation

1. Connect an Ethernet cable
Connect the LAN cable on the camera to the network device (hub or switch).
NOTE: If there has an IEEE802.3af PoE switch in your network, you can connect the
camera LAN cable to this PoE switch to obtain power. The power adapter is
unnecessary when Internet camera is connected to a PoE switch.
2. Check the LED (Front Panel)
The LED is defined to identify LAN connection type. When LAN port is connected, the LED will be green.
3. Place the camera on the table or fix it onto ceiling or wall
Use screws to fix the Internet camera onto the ceiling or wall. You could also put the camera in the table directly.
4. Attach the power supply
Plug in power adapter and connect to power source. After power on, the camera will start to operate.
NOTE: 1. Only use the power adapter supplied with Internet camera. Otherwise, the
product may be damaged.
2. The power adapter is unnecessary when Internet camera is connected to a
PoE switch. Otherwise, the product may be damaged when Internet camera is
connected to a PoE switch and power adapter simultaneously.
5. Attach Speaker to camera (option)
If user needs not only video stream but also audio stream, then the speaker should be attached to camera.
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2.4 Initial Utility Installation

This chapter shows how to quick set up your H.264 camera. The camera is with the default settings. However to help you find the networked camera quickly the windows utility PLANET IPWizard II can search the cameras in the network that shall help you to configure some basic setting before you started advanced management and monitoring.
1. Insert the bundled CD into the CD-ROM drive to launch the auto-run program. Once completed, a welcome menu screen will appear.
2. Click the “IPWizard II” hyperlink; you will see the dialog box as below.
NOTE: If the welcome screen does not appear, click “Start” at the taskbar. Then, select
“Run” and type “D:\Utility\IPWizard II\setup.exe”, assume D is your CD-ROM drive.
3. The “Welcome to the InstallShield Wizard for PLANET IPWizard II” prompt will display on the
screen and click “Next” to continue.
4. Please click “Next” to install with original settings, or you may click “Change…” button to
modify the install folder then press “Next” to continue.
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5. Please click “Install” to start the installation.
6. Please click “Finish” to complete the installation and launch program immediately.
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2.5 Preparation

When you installed the camera on a LAN environment, you may execute PLANET IPWizard II to discover camera’s IP address and set up related parameters in the camera.

2.5.1 Search and View by PLANET IPWizard II

When you installed the Camera on a LAN environment, you have two easy ways to search your Cameras by PLANET IPWizard II or UPnP discovery. Here is the way to execute PLANET IPWizard II to discover Camera’s IP address and set up related parameter in a Camera.

Search

When launch the PLANET IPWizard II, a searching window will pop up. PLANET IPWizard II is starting to search Network Cameras on the LAN. The existed devices will be listed as below.
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View

If PLANET IPWizard II finds network devices, View button will be available. Please select the device you want to view and click the View button. Then you could see the video from camera
directly. Furthermore you could double click the left button of mouse to link to the network device by browser.

2.5.2 Configure Network by PLANET IPWizard II

In case you want to change the IP related parameters of wired interface, please select the device
you want to configure and click the LAN button. Relative settings will be carried out as below.
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You could modify the relative settings of the selected device. Click “<<” button will quit the LAN setting procedure and click “>>” button will move to next page as below.
In case, you do not want to change username and/or password, then just click “Submit” button to perform your setting accordingly. Click “<<” button will go back to previous page.
If you like to change username and/or password of the device, just click the check button. Then, the related fields will show up as below.
After keying in new username and password, click “Submit” button to perform your setting accordingly. Click “<<” button will go back to previous page.
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2.6 Using UPnP of Windows XP or Vista

2.6.1 Windows XP

UPnP™ is short for Universal Plug and Play, which is a networking architecture that provides compatibility among networking equipment, software, and peripherals. This device is an UPnP enabled device. If the operating system, Windows XP, of your PC is UPnP enabled, the device will be very easy to configure. Use the following steps to enable UPnP settings only if your operating system of PC is running Windows XP.
NOTE: Windows 2000 does not support UPnP feature.
Go to Start > Settings, and Click Control Panel
The “Control Panel” will display on the screen and double click “Add or Remove Programs” to
continue
The “Add or Remove Programs” will display on the screen and click Add/Remove Widows Components to continue.
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The following screen will appear, select “Networking Services” and click “Details” to continue
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The “Networking Services” will display on the screen, select “Universal Plug and Play” and click “OK” to continue.
Please click “Next” to continue
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The program will start installing the UPnP automatically. You will see the below pop-up screen, please wait while Setup configures the components.
Please click “Finish” to complete the UPnP installation
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Double-click “My Network Places” on the desktop, the “My Network Places” will display on the
screen and double-click the UPnP icon with Internet camera to view your device in an internet browser.
ICA-HM230 - 00304f1a2244
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2.6.2 Windows Vista

UPnP™ is short for Universal Plug and Play, which is a networking architecture that provides compatibility among networking equipment, software, and peripherals. This device is an UPnP enabled device. If the operating system, Windows Vista, of your PC is UPnP enabled, the device will be very easy to configure. Use the following steps to enable UPnP settings only if your operating system of PC is running Windows Vista.
Go to Start > Control Panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center, and turn on “Network Discovery”.
Double-click “My Network Places“ on the desktop, the “My Network Places” will display on the
screen and double-click the UPnP icon with Internet camera to view your device in an internet browser.
ICA-HM230 00304fA15075
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2.7 Install the Device behind a NAT Router

Once installed, the device is accessible on your LAN. To access the device from the Internet you must configure your broadband router to allow incoming data traffic to the device. If the device is installed on the LAN with a router, then it may get a dynamic IP address from the DHCP server. However, if the device wants to be accessed from the WAN, its IP address needs to be setup as fixed IP, also the port forwarding or Virtual Server function of router needs to be setup.
However, if your NAT router supports UPnP feature, it can be very easy to achieve NAT traversal
automatically. To do this, enable the NAT-traversal feature, which will attempt to automatically
configure the router to allow access to the camera.
Installing the device with an UPnP router on your network is an easy 3–step procedure:
(1) Enable UPnP option of your NAT router 
(2) Enable UPnP NAT traversal option of the Network Camera (default) 
(3) Access your Network Camera by DIPS 
(1) Enable UPnP option of your NAT router
To use UPnP IGD function (NAT traversal), you need to make sure the UPnP function is enabled
in your router. Most new home routers should support this function. Some of routers are default
enable and others are not. Please check user’s manual of your NAT router for detail.
(2) Enable UPnP NAT traversal option of the Network Camera
Refer to Setting Î Network Î UPnP page for detail NAT traversal setting. Note that this option
is default enabled.
(3) Access your Network Camera by DIPS
Refer to Setting Î System Î System page for detail DIPS information
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2.8 Setup ActiveX to use the PT Internet Camera

The Internet camera web pages communicate with the Internet camera using an ActiveX control. The ActiveX control must be downloaded from the Internet camera and installed on your PC. Your Internet Explorer security settings must allow for the web page to work correctly. To use the Internet camera, user must setup his IE browser as follows:

2.8.1 Internet Explorer 6 for Windows XP

From your IE browse Î ”Tools” Î ”Internet Options…” Î ”Security” ΔCustom Level…”, please setup your “Settings” as follow.
Set the first 3 items
Download the signed ActiveX controls
Download the unsigned ActiveX controls
Initialize and script the ActiveX controls not masked as safe to Prompt
By now, you have finished your entire PC configuration for Internet camera.
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2.8.2 Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP

From your IE browse Î ”Tools” Î ”Internet Options…” Î ”Security” ΔCustom Level…”, please setup your “Settings” as follow.
Set the first 3 items
Allow previously unused ActiveX control to run…
Allows Script lets
Automatic prompting for ActiveX controls
By now, you have finished your entire PC configuration for Internet camera.
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2.8.3 Internet Explorer 7 for Windows Vista

From your IE browse Î ”Tools” Î ”Internet Options…” Î ”Security” Î ”Internet” ΔCustom Level…”, please setup your “Settings” as follow.
Enable “Automatic prompting for ActiveX controls”
Prompt “Initialize and script active controls not marked….”
From your IE browse Î ”Tools” Î ”Internet Options…” Î ”Security” Î ”Trusted Sites” ΔCustom Level…”, please setup your “Settings” as follow.
Enable “Automatic prompting for ActiveX controls”
Prompt “Initialize and script active controls not marked….”
By now, you have finished your entire PC configuration for Internet camera.
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