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Command Buttons
Q-SYS QuickStarts : Public Address (Paging Systems)
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CERTIFICATION STEPS COMPLETED
Certification Steps Completed
1 ) Control QuickStarts
4h 18m 13s
Arrays of Controls
15m 13s
The State Trigger Control
18m 20s
Interlocking Buttons
24m 52s
Named Components
21m 25s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops (part 1: Tables and Arrays)
17m 12s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops; Oh My! (part 2)
15m 57s
Deep Lua: Arrays, Tables, and Loops (part 3: GetComponents)
14m 20s
Deep Lua: Demystifying The EventHandler
30m 36s
Dynamic Scripting (for Press & Hold Presets) with a good bit of JSON too!
36m 14s
Status Indicators and the hidden power of Lookup Tables in Lua
22m 34s
Multidimensional tables and Lua's version of the switch-case
16m 2s
Demystifying the role of "Control Frames" in QSYS
25m 28s
2 ) Q-SYS Networking Fundamentals
57m 47s
Introduction to Q-SYS Networking
8m 36s
Q-SYS Network Topologies
9m 14s
Prioritization
7m 41s
Multicast and Bandwidth
15m 27s
Q-SYS Reflect
5m 13s
Isolated Networks
11m 36s
Assessment
3 ) Public Address (Paging Systems)
1h 43m 49s
Terminology
9m 26s
Wiring
11m 18s
Administrator Settings
14m 57s
Virtual Page Station Controls
14m 37s
Virtual Page Station UCI
7m 4s
Command Buttons
12m 5s
PA Router Control Panel
4m 41s
Priority Ducker
15m 21s
BGM Ducking
7m 3s
Core to Core Paging
7m 17s
4 ) Automatic Camera Preset Recall (ACPR)
13m 16s
Intro to ACPR
2m 11s
ACPR v3.0 Update
4m 27s
Autoframing with ACPR
3m 22s
How To Enable Auto Framing
3m 16s
5 ) Video Freeze for NV Endpoints
1m 41s
Video Freeze for NV Endpoints
1m 41s
6 ) Camera Streams to NV Series devices
2m 47s
Camera Streams to NV Series devices
2m 47s
7 ) Q-SYS Security – Introduction and Best Practices
13m 35s
Introduction to Q-SYS Security
3m 3s
Q-SYS Security Best Practices
10m 32s
8 ) Integrating Microsoft Teams Room
8m 54s
Integrating Microsoft Teams Rooms into Q-SYS
8m 54s
9 ) HID Conferencing
1m 58s
HID Conferencing
1m 58s
10 ) Integrating Axon C1
14m 34s
Integrating Axon C1: Part A
7m 26s
Integrating Axon C1: Part B
7m 8s
11 ) Bring Your Own Control with Q-SYS
4m 32s
Bring Your Own Control with the Q-SYS Ecosystem
4m 32s
12 ) Feature License Activation
4m 12s
Feature License Activation
4m 12s
13 ) Q-SYS Video 101 Training
0m 0s
Link to the Q-SYS Video 101 Training Series
0m 0s
14 ) Block Controller
19m 9s
Part A: Block Controller A
9m 50s
Part B: Block Controller B
9m 19s
15 ) Online Connectivity & Security Considerations
12m 37s
Online Connectivity & Security Considerations
12m 37s
16 ) Intro to External Control
23m 3s
Part A: Connecting to Q-SYS
7m 34s
Part B: Issuing Controls
7m 37s
Part C: Managing Change Groups
7m 52s
17 ) Public Address
18 ) Dynamic Pairing
6m 38s
Part A: Dynamic Pairing
6m 38s
19 ) Core-to-Core Streaming
8m 23s
Part A: Core-to-Core Streaming
8m 23s
20 ) Room Combining
12m 23s
Part A: Build a Room Mockup
6m 23s
Part B: Wiring Your Design
6m 0s
21 ) Notch Feedback Controller
4m 0s
Part A: Notch Feedback Controller
4m 0s
22 ) Ambient Noise Compensators
14m 9s
Part A: Ambient Compensator Setup
4m 13s
Part B: Gated Ambient Compensator
4m 19s
Part C: Continuous Ambient Compensator
5m 37s
23 ) Intro to Control Scripting
12m 30s
Part A: Control Script Component
6m 39s
Part B: Fader Turns Red
5m 51s
24 ) Networking Overview
15m 3s
Part A: Basic Networking
4m 35s
Part B: Network Protocols
4m 28s
Part C: Q-LAN - Audio Channels vs. Audio Streams
2m 29s
Part D: Q-LAN - Maximizing Channel Output
3m 31s
25 ) E-Mailer
6m 30s
Part A: E-mailer Component
6m 30s
Video Transcript
Video Transcript
Command Buttons
12m 5s
00:06
All right, welcome back.
00:07
So, we were just saying,
00:09
what if we wanted to make our life even easier
00:12
by having just a single button that automatically
00:16
preloads all of the decisions we’ve made?
00:18
So, you’ve got a message that’s consistently
00:20
going out to the same rooms,
00:22
with the same message at the same priority level.
00:24
You don’t want to have your user pick that manually
00:27
every single time and send it; you want a single button.
00:30
“Well, Nate,” you say, addressing me on a first-name basis,
00:36
which I did not allow, “why wouldn’t you just use a snapshot bank for that?”
00:40
“That’s a brilliant idea, Jimmy,”
00:43
I say, not caring what your actual name is,
00:47
except for the fact that a snapshot bank is only
00:51
going to be relevant to this particular virtual page station.
00:55
I could certainly grab a snapshot bank and have it
00:58
record everything that’s in this control panel,
01:00
and then I could hit that load button,
01:03
and all those options will be preloaded exactly
01:06
the way you wanted them to.
01:07
That’s fine. What if you’ve got more than one virtual page station?
01:12
You would then have to have multiple snapshot
01:15
banks for each of those virtual page stations,
01:17
and then you’d have to save that configuration
01:20
for every single possible virtual page station so
01:22
that anyone who’s using this system from anywhere
01:24
all have access to the same possible configuration
01:27
of those announcements. That’s a lot of time.
01:30
I’d much rather have a button that does it,
01:33
that can be given to any of those virtual page stations.
01:36
The same is true with the physical page station.
01:39
The physical page station, you may recall,
01:41
has this keypad on the front,
01:43
and that keypad does not give you the breadth of
01:46
detail that you can choose from everything that I just put onto my UCI.
01:50
I’ve got numbers, and I’ve got some buttons on the side
01:54
that are designed explicitly for this.
01:57
What we’re about to talk about:
01:58
we’re going to be creating commands.
02:00
A command is all of the things we just talked about,
02:04
everything wrapped up into one,
02:07
so that it can be launched from a physical page station
02:10
or from a virtual page station.
02:12
It’s one button, and then you can hit it and send it along. It’s merry.
02:16
So, what I need to do first is I’m going to disconnect,
02:20
actually, from the core, and we’re going to make some
02:22
adjustments to our virtual page station.
02:25
The virtual page station has some properties which
02:27
we didn’t talk about earlier.
02:28
I said we were going to expand the control panel to
02:30
make it a little bit more exhaustive.
02:32
We’re going to do that now.
02:33
So, we have something called command button counts.
02:37
I’m going to make that command button count four,
02:40
and when I do that, you’ll notice that the control panel has changed.
02:44
I now have a section called command buttons,
02:46
and I have four buttons: A, B, C, and D, and this other
02:50
button that says ad hoc. We’ve already made this much larger now.
02:55
These command buttons, I’m going to say right now,
02:59
might be a little confusing because if you are in the
03:03
schematic elements library and you type in command buttons,
03:07
you are going to find a component called command buttons.
03:11
This command button has absolutely nothing to do with the paging system.
03:16
This command button component is used,
03:19
if you’re familiar with any of our other trainings that cover them,
03:21
to send a string to a third-party device via either a TCP
03:27
connection or a serial connection to make that device do something.
03:30
This is useful for things like changing the lights in a lighting control system,
03:35
changing shades, turning a projector on and off,
03:38
sending commands to TVs—anything that you just need
03:40
to send a one-way communication to a third-party device.
03:43
You can do it with this, but it’s not the same thing as
03:48
these command buttons. We have two things in CUS
03:52
that are both called command buttons, and it drives me crazy.
03:57
So, I’m just going to pretend this command button doesn’t
04:00
exist at all, and when we talk about command buttons here,
04:03
we’re talking just about the paging command buttons—
04:06
buttons that launch commands that are saved in the administrator.
04:11
All right, so the other thing I want to do while we’re here
04:14
editing our virtual page station is I can make some other changes.
04:18
I said earlier that I don’t really love these zone buttons.
04:21
I could choose to hide them.
04:23
If I hide those zone buttons, well,
04:25
how can I choose what zones I want?
04:27
Well, I could go to my zone group count.
04:30
I’m going to add, um, I’m going to say seven to my zone group counts.
04:36
I now have another batch of controls down here called zone groups,
04:39
and zone groups do the same thing that the zone buttons do.
04:42
They let you choose the destinations you’re going to send something to,
04:45
but each of these buttons will be determined
04:48
by this drop-down menu beneath it.
04:51
I’m actually going to leave my zone buttons shown
04:54
as we go through this just because I want to show you what it’s doing.
04:57
I’m going to save the core and run again,
04:59
and we will see what those group buttons allow us to do.
05:03
Okay, we’re connected.
05:04
So, with the drop-down menu beneath each of the zone groups,
05:07
I can choose from any of the zone names that we configured
05:11
in the administrator or any of the tags.
05:14
So, I could make the first five the same zones that I had earlier:
05:20
my lobby, my conference, and my NPR one, two, and three.
05:25
Then, I could use my other ones for the tags I created.
05:28
This is all NPR, and that’s conference room.
05:35
When you engage that zone group,
05:37
all of the zones that it is associated with will engage.
05:40
So, if I click all NPR, look, all of my zones engaged,
05:43
including zone one, because I turned that on independently.
05:47
If I clear them all, I could choose all of my, uh, oops,
05:51
wrong one, that’s supposed to be floor one.
05:53
If I engage my floor one, boom, all of those are engaged.
05:57
If I choose NPR1 group, you know, zone three engaged.
06:00
This will give you a little bit more specificity on which zone
06:04
or groups of zones you want to give, and it’s a button.
06:07
You put that in the UCI.
06:08
You could theoretically just give the user one of these drop-down menus.
06:16
Oh, how about that?
06:17
You don’t need to have them have lots of buttons to choose from.
06:20
Just have a drop-down menu, and they choose the one that they want.
06:23
You don’t even need to give them that button at all.
06:25
Just give them the drop-down menu, and it selects them for them.
06:28
So, that’s an option too.
06:30
Not what we’re talking about right now, but just something to think about.
06:32
All right, we’re talking about commands,
06:35
and here are our command buttons.
06:36
They’re currently grayed out.
06:38
We have to create the commands in the administrator.
06:41
So, first things first, we’re going to go back to the administrator,
06:44
and we’re going to go down here to the commands tab.
06:47
When you didn’t have a PA system in your design,
06:51
you would probably use the commands tab to either
06:54
load snapshots and schedule that snapshot to occur
06:57
in your command schedule or maybe to change a control.
07:01
Well, now that we’ve got a PA system, if you hit the plus button,
07:04
we’ve got a couple more options:
07:05
PA page command and PA play message command.
07:08
These do exactly what you probably think they should do.
07:11
If you create the page command,
07:13
you can fine-tune all of the settings to make a page.
07:16
These are all the things that we just saw in the virtual page station.
07:20
You’ve got the ability to choose the preamble,
07:23
you’ve got the ability to choose what zones or tags
07:26
you’re going to send it to, and it’s got a couple of other things as well.
07:29
So, at the top, you can choose a name for it,
07:32
you can choose a code for it.
07:34
The code is what you type into the keypad on the page station.
07:41
That’s why the keypad exists.
07:43
So, if I wanted to make a page with a code of 100,
07:46
I could do it that way.
07:47
In fact, I’m going to make a message this way.
07:49
I’ll make a PA play message command.
07:52
We’re going to call this the elevator call,
07:56
where we’ll play the elevator file.
07:58
That’s going to be code 100. We’ll send it at a high priority,
08:03
and we’ll send it to the lobby as well as all three NPRs.
08:08
We hit okay, we hit update, and we save that,
08:12
and now we’ve got a command.
08:15
I can go and once again engage my hover monitor on zone one.
08:21
I can go to my page station, I can type in 100.
08:26
It tells me the elevator call is ready to go.
08:29
I hit talk to issue, and ladies and gentlemen,
08:32
Fake Hotel would like to remind you that our elevators are also fake.
08:36
Please stop pressing the elevator call button and start climbing those stairs.
08:40
Thank you. That’s true.
08:43
So, that’s a way to send an announcement from the physical page station.
08:49
We created the command.
08:50
What we want to do is we want to then load that command
08:53
into something like the virtual page station’s commands.
08:56
That will be done back in the administrator.
08:59
We’re going to go to the page stations tab.
09:01
Here we see all the page stations that are in our design.
09:05
I’ve got my virtual page station, and I’ve got my physical page station.
09:09
Let’s open up the virtual page station.
09:12
Here, you’ve got some generic settings.
09:14
You can choose what priority level this page station is given.
09:19
Again, we’re in station user priority mode right now,
09:21
so the stations themselves get the priority that is sent out.
09:25
We’ll make this a high priority page station.
09:28
I want to go to the command buttons section of this.
09:30
Here are the four command buttons I created.
09:32
You can have more command buttons or fewer command
09:34
buttons at your discretion, and in each one,
09:37
I can choose which of my commands to load in.
09:40
I’ve only created the one, the elevator call,
09:43
so I’m going to load that one in, and I can then change its legend.
09:48
We heard legend before earlier, right? What’s the legend?
09:51
The legend is the label of a button.
09:53
Right now, if I look in my design, these command buttons are called A, B, C, and D.
10:00
These get automatically populated from the administrator.
10:04
So, if I am on this page and I say that this is going to be called elevator for the legend,
10:09
and then I update this, that gets propagated
10:11
forward to this as well.
10:14
That’ll make it much easier on you if you’ve
10:16
got a lot of virtual page stations.
10:18
You load that command, and it automatically
10:20
sends that name to the buttons as well,
10:22
so you don’t need to go through and try to
10:24
remember what you loaded onto each of
10:26
those commands and potentially get the name
10:27
wrong as you’re changing it.
10:28
You’ve got the word elevator there.
10:30
Now, you can just simply click that.
10:32
All of the settings of that elevator are pre-loaded,
10:35
and then you hit play, and it’s a one-button solution
10:38
to make that commonly sent announcement go out.
10:42
You could also do that with the physical page station.
10:45
If I go to my physical page station, I go to its command buttons.
10:49
It also has four command buttons: A, B, C, and D.
10:52
That’s what these buttons are here on the right side of the bank.
10:56
I’ve got my keypad in the middle and then A, B, C, and D on the side.
10:59
So, if I choose to load my elevator call into option A,
11:05
once again update that, then here on my physical page station,
11:09
I can press the A button. It says the zone is ready.
11:12
It says elevator call. I can hit talk, and that will send out as well.
11:17
Oh, I should say the other version of this, the 1650,
11:21
that doesn’t have a keypad, it just has 16 command buttons.
11:25
So, you have 16 options of basically a speed dial on a
11:29
common type of announcement that you want to send out.
11:32
Those are commands, and we have now added those to our virtual page station.
11:37
We can then put that button onto the UCI to make
11:40
things a little bit easier if that’s the way that you want to go.
11:43
What is ad hoc, you ask?
11:45
Well, ad hoc just returns you out of command
11:48
button mode and returns you back to the manual mode.
11:51
So, you could do a combination of this.
11:53
You could have it that when you choose a command button,
11:56
that sends it out, but you still have the ability to do manual things as well.
11:59
Totally up to you, however you want to handle it.
administration
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