So I am creating a page with an Alarm Status Table. When an alarm goes active, a counter is incremented, and if that counter is positive and greater than zero, a Sound Player Component will beep every five seconds.
Thank you. I was able to modify my SQL query and reference the full name of the equipment and alarm (e.g. Temper Furnace instead of TMPF and Over temp instead of OTPV), so I think all that remains is the concatenation, which seems straightforward. I will give this a try (probably tomorrow) and report back.
Does your camera have the option to emit an alarm sound when it detects motion? If so, when you are in live view tap on the siren icon to see if it sounds the same.
I recall a post here, possibly 3 months ago that their camera had switched (by itself) to activate alarm / siren when motion is detected.
Firmware update glitch?
I am creating an alarm clock application, using just_audio to play the alarm ringtones and audio_session to configure the audio type. Without configuring the audio, the app uses the media volume for the audio. I want the app to tell the system that this is an alarm audio, so it uses the system alarm volume for the ringtones and play it even in DnD etc.
Turns out, it was the AndroidAudioFlags.audibilityEnforced flag, which seems to be pretty unrealiable, and can cause differing behavior on different devices. Removing it causes the volume to be controlled by alarm stream volume.
When I set an alarm (or set a timer) in Clocks in Ubuntu 20.04, the alarm clearly triggers as at the appropriate moment a notification appears at the top of the screen and I get a message in the Clocks application asking me to stop or snooze; however this is all silent - I get no audio alarm. I have another laptop still running 18.04 and the audio for these alarms works fine on that.
On my 20.04 machine, audio is functioning fine in other applications. I've checked that notifications are on. The Notifications settings in Settings for Clocks has notifications, sound alerts, notification popups and even lock screen notifications on. When in Settings I check Applications, GNOME Clocks has notifications on, too. In the sound panel, system sounds are on and they are turned up, and when I test the alert sound buttons I get an appropriate noise.
Ring: Please bring back the always-illuminated MODE lights when the keypad is constantly powered and power-save mode is off, just like the old gen 1 keypad (and just like probably 100% of every other alarm system out there).
The ANS Series of products from Edwards is a collection of high-performance audio notification systems that provide voice evacuation capability which meets the emergency voice alarm requirements of NFPA 72 for UL Listed fire alarm applications. ANS panels are available in 25, 50, or 100 Watt models and include a microphone, amplifier, tone generator, digital message repeater (DMR), and supervisory interface.
These self-contained systems offer robust field-configurable features and are supported by a wide range of accessory equipment that provides application flexibilty and reliable performance for new and retrofit installations alike.
Expander panels and modules extend the range of the ANS system to meet the needs of demanding audio applications. Accessory equipment such as zone switchers and remote microphones offer the sophistication of high-end systems for a relatively low cost.
ANS systems are ideal for use with Edwards fire alarm control panels when emergency voice alarm services is required. Genesis speakers and speaker-strobes may be used with ANS audio systems to provide a clean attractive appearance for voice audio applications.
Standard Features
Does APC make a small UPS which
a) has an option to permanently disable the audible alarm or
b) a cancel action for the audible alarm?
I'm currently using a small APC UPS to provide backup power to the base station of our cordless phones. This allows the phones to operate for an extended period during power outages, and means we don't need to use our sole hardwired phone. Sure, eventually the handsets will run down or the UPS will, but for the typical duration of power outages here we're covered.
Problem is, we DO NOT need an audible alarm on this, and in fact it kinda forces us to turn off the UPS. I know bigger, fancier UPS's have alarm cancel buttons. But I don't want a big, huge fancy UPS to power such a low-consumption device as a cordless phone base station. I'd like a simple, quiet system. Any ideas??
Paul,
All of the APC USB Back UPS's Battery Backup alarm(i.e.,4 beeps every 30 seconds) can be disabled permanently through APC Power Chute software. You can reconnect the UPS to your cordless phones after you disable the battery backup alarms on your Computer via the USB cable.
Could you please let me know the UPS exact model number so that I can provide you the steps and software details to disable the battery backup alarm? You can find these details on a white bar code sticker at the rear of the unit.
iOS 14.7 doesn't entirely fix the issue. This update makes the alarm ring with the Radar sound by default rather than the lossless quality music I pick from Apple Music. However, at least the alarm can make sounds to wake me up this time.
I am also having issues. I have tried the suggeste3d solution and changning downloaded songs to high res but still it is not working, no song i splayed only a default alarm. Tried both on iphoen 12 pro max and iphone x and 11....
OMG this is so annoying! I was wondering why my alarm defaulted to Radar even though the song is downloaded properly according to Apple. I had no idea Lossless Audio was the reason, ugh. This is much worse than trying to find the play button when checking the fit on the AirPod Pros!.
In the last couple weeks I actually had a discussion with another tech here about how we do not remember having ever heard a report of the Firefighter causing false alarm without sound input. To my memory this may be the first time I have heard of this kind of false alarm.
It is an audio detector, so obviously any similar tone that might have occurred should be considered, but the source is very specific and the device has proven relatively immune to false triggers in my experience.
I use a TV as my second monitor, I want to have an alarm that rings on my tv(really loud), I configured on BIOS for my Laptop to turn on 5 minutes before the time configured on windows alarm, but when it turns on it rings on my headphones and not on my tv, but my tv is enabled as my default sound device, I tried run this command nircmd setdefaultsounddevice "LG TV" 1 on startup and common startup but it didn't worked, what should I do?
I tried to force audio to audio jack with amixer cset numid=3 1 or using the raspi-config which works for other applications like audacity, vlc and other multimedia software except for the alarm clock alarm-clock-applet -clock , Which I am using for a project. I tried removing pulseaudio to avoid conflict but yet no success.
If someone could link the details to getting audio to play through the raspberry pi audio jack, you need omxplayer to use it via bash. (probably some header files somewhere included for programmatic use). You'll want to reboot after you install it.
Mid flight, an audio alarm comes on out of no where (usually 40 to 50 minutes into the flight already stable at cruse altitude for some time). Unfortunately being the "operator" that I am, I'm limited in the knowledge of the 737. Further more, I am doing everything the same way I was taught and learned on the IXEG 737 on XPlane10 (and had no issues or alarms). All "Failures" have been turned off. But what confuses me the worse is that nothing in the cockpit lights up that may give me a clue as where the problem is. I keep scanning the panels and don't see any lights on, or any values being above or below the standard operating values.
This happens on every flight so far I made. This alarm does not seem to have any impact on the flight, it is just annoying going off in my headset. So far, the only pattern I found is that the audio alarm goes off when I'm in mid of my descent (usually in the FL 250 altitude).
The first Alarm.com outdoor camera featuring two-way audio, the ADC-V724 is a direct upgrade to the V723 outdoor wifi camera. This camera features video analytics, HDR, 1080P resolution for recording and live view, as well as up to 15m of IR detection. Using the newly built-in microphone and speaker, you can hear and speak to visitors within range of the camera, as well as get audio from your recorded clips. If you have a high-priority location you would like to monitor and be able to interact with from your phone the ADC-V724 is for you.
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