IPC-2605N The First Consumer-Friendly Network Camera Edition 1.1, 10/2012 www.zyxel.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Contents Getting to know your IPC-2605N ............................................................................... 6 2.1 Package Contents ............................................................................................ 6 2.2 Features ........................................................................................................... 7 2.3 Camera Layout ................................................................................................ 8 2.
Important Notices Regulatory Notice 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. FCC Interference Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules.
About This Manual This manual is indented only for users of the ZyXEL IPC-2605N network camera. Conventions in this Manual While using this manual, pay attention to symbols and notations used to draw attention to special situations, such as: Caution! Information provided with this symbol is critical to prevent damage to the product or injury to the user. Important! This symbol indicates instructions that a user must follow in order to complete a task.
2 Getting to know your IPC-2605N 2.1 Package Contents Before setup, ensure your package contains all contents. If anything is missing, contact your distributor.
2.2 Features ZyXEL’s IPC-2605N sports an advanced 340-degree pan and 100-degree tilt mechanical design, ideal for deployment in warehouses, offices, restaurant, lobby area, or anywhere it’s important to have a wide field of view.
2.3 Camera Layout Number Contents IR LEDs x6 (12 in total) Light Sensor Lens 2.0 mm, F2.
2.4 LED Status Indicator The LED status indicator consists of a blue status indicator and red IR LEDs. The LEDs appear as follows: Red IR LEDs (Left), Blue Status LED (Right) When the IP camera is turned on, the LEDs will light in the following patterns: Red LEDs On Off On Off Blinking (Every 0.5 seconds) Off Off Blinking Blue LED On On Off Off Off Blinking (Every 0.5 seconds) Blinking (Every 0.
3 Installation 3.1 Connecting Your IPC-2605N The picture below illustrates the basic connection of your IPC-2605N camera: The following table describes the numbered items: Number Contents Ethernet cable from PC to hub/router. Ethernet cable from router to camera. Wireless antenna. Attach to connector on the back of the camera. Power: Attach the power adapter to the camera’s power port, and connect the plug to a power outlet. Important! Do not rotate your camera by hand.
3.2 Wireless While using the ZyXEL Wireless antenna, you’ll be able to connect your camera to your network via WiFi. Keep in mind that you can only have one active connection at any given time – either through LAN or a wireless network. Note: If the wireless connection drops or seems slow, try moving your IP camera closer to the wireless access point for an improved signal.
3.3 Wall and Ceiling Mounting Screw the mounting plate into the mounting surface Loosen the top screw on the trapezoid-shaped fastening bracket. Return fastening bracket to its original position. Secure the IP camera to the mounting plate Insert the tips of the fastening bracket into the IP camera as shown. Use a screwdriver to tighten the fastening bracket firmly back in place.
4 Initial Setup Before running the setup utility, make sure you have the IP Camera properly connected. To begin setup, insert the installation CD supplied with the camera into the CD-ROM drive of the viewing PC, and the eaZy Wizard utility will start and guide you during the installation process of the hardware and software for your IP camera.
5 Accessing your camera Your camera’s video feeds can be accessed in a number of ways, as follows. 1) Your camera is CloudEnabled™ and can be viewed from any PC running a modern web browser with the Flash plug-in installed. When you first setup your camera using the included CD, it will register your camera with iSecurity+. Simply point your web browser to http://zyxel.isecurityplus.com and login with the username and password you created during setup.
5.1 CloudEnabled™ Viewing 5.1.1 Accessing via iSecurity+ Smartphone App iSecurity+ is an iOS/Android App designed to allow you to quickly and easily access, control, and view your camera’s video feeds from anywhere. The iSecurity+ can be located on the App Store and Android Market from your device by searching “iSecurity+,” or directly from your computer at the Android Market (http://market.android.com) for Android devices, or the App Store through iTunes (http://www.apple.com/itunes). 5.1.
This page allows you to easily adjust your camera’s time zone, display and audio settings, and infrared lighting. Sharing options can be accessed from the Sharing tab at the top of the screen.
5.2 Direct Viewing of your Camera (For Advanced Users) 5.2.1 Accessing via PC web browser Users can access their video feeds and camera management tools easily through any web browser. Simply follow these steps. 1) Open any web browser (Internet Explorer, Safari, Firefox, Chrome, etc.) 2) Type in your camera’s IP address (eg. 192.168.1.11. This number can be easily found by using the eaZy set up Wizard utility) 3) A dialogue box will appear requesting a user name and password.
7) You’re now ready to view and manage your camera from your web browser. Note: If your IP camera is behind a firewall, you will need to enable ports 80 and 554 in your firewall and forward them to the internal IP address of the camera. Should you have more than one, increase the values above by 1 (For example, the second camera would have ports 81 and 555.) 5.2.1.1 Page Layout On the first page, you can see the basic control panel on the top and left, and live video on the right hand side.
The following table describes the labels found on this screen. Number Label Left control panel PTZ speed Top control panel Preset Point Digital Zoom Control Live video pane X-Axis Y-Axis Description provides control over voice communication, Pan/Tilt, zoom, and snapshot set the pan and tilt speed on a scale of 1 to 10 Allows you to adjust Speaker volume, microphone volume, view size, and camera settings Changing the preset point allows you move the camera to a pre-defined point.
Icon Label Fit browser Description Resizes the live video pane to fit your browser window Actual size Resizes the live video pane to the original size Microphone Volume Setup Adjust microphone volume. Click the icon to mute the built-in microphone Click the [Setup] button to access the settings for you camera. Speaker Volume Adjust speaker volume. Click this icon to mute the built-in speaker Control Direction control buttons to rotate the camera, and a home button for returning to the preset position.
5.2.1.3 Digital Zoom To adjust digital zoom, move the slider at the lower left of the screen to the left to zoom out, or to the right to zoom in. To select viewable area, click the image above the slider – highlighted in the picture below. 5.2.1.4 Voice Communication button allows you to speak into your PC microphone and Pressing the broadcast through the camera’s speaker or audio line out. To talk through the external speaker connected to the IP camera, place your cursor on the button and click.
6 Configuration 6.1 Video Settings The Video Settings screen consists of all the basic settings options. To access the main setup page, click the setup button at the top right in the live view screen. You can configure detailed settings of your IP camera here. The following table describes the labels found on this screen. Label Resolution Codec Framerate Quality Save Reset Description Resolution settings. Options are QQVGA, QVGA, and VGA, The codec used to encode video. Framerate. 5~30 FPS.
6.2 Camera Settings To access the Camera Settings screen, click on ‘Camera’ on the navigation bar in the settings menu. From this page, you can control image and color related settings, as well as the IR lights of your camera. The following table describes the labels found on this screen.
Label Video Properties Brightness Sharpness Saturation Contrast Flickerless Exposure Control Auto Manual Low Light Behavior Enable Low Light Mode LED Indicator IR Light Control Operation Mode Activate/Deactive IR light on… Embed Text and Image Location Text Enable Flip Mode Description Set image brightness Set image sharpness Set image saturation Set image’s contrast to compensate for different lighting conditions. Sets Flickerless mode.
6.3 Audio Settings The Audio Settings screen allows you to enable or disable audio, as well as adjust volume. To access the Audio Settings screen, go to settings, then select Audio from the sidebar. The following screen will appear. The following table describes the labels found within this screen. Label Enable Audio Codec Volume Save Reset Description Select Yes or No to enable or disable audio. Select the codec which will be used to encode audio.
6.4 User Settings The User Settings pane allows you to add, modify, or remove viewers/administrators. Viewers are only able to view live audio, and can’t change any camera settings. Administrators may control the camera and make changes to settings. To access the user settings pane, navigate to Settings, then select Users from the sidebar. The following screen will appear. The following table describes the labels found within this screen.
6.5 Network Settings The Network Settings page allows you to check your network settings and make detailed adjustments. To access the Network Settings pane, navigate to settings and select Network from the sidebar. The following screen will appear. 6.5.1 Ethernet Settings The Ethernet Settings page will allow you to choose your IP address configuration. To access the Ethernet Settings page, navigate to Settings, then select Network, and Ethernet from the sidebar. The following page will appear.
On this page, you can set the camera to obtain an IP address via DHCP (recommended), use a manual IP address, or obtain an IP address via PPPoE, for which a valid user name and password are required. 6.5.2 Wireless Settings If you have installed the wireless antenna, you’ll be able to set up a wireless connection from this page. To connect wirelessly, check the [Use Wireless First] box to give priority to wireless connections when the LAN network is also connected.
6.5.3 Network Diagnostic Here you can run the diagnostic tool for your current network settings, and it will show error messages if any anomaly is detected. For further information on error messages, please refer to the troubleshooting section. 6.5.4 Network Bandwidth This automatic network connection test helps users better define the appropriate video bitrate for their network. To perform the network bandwidth test: 1.
This message indicates that the currently connected network has the capacity to support up to 10 network cameras of identical bit rate settings (either on Stream 1 or Stream 2). If the message shows a less favorable result, go to [Setup] > [Video] to select a lower bitrate. 6.5.5 Advanced This page allows you to adjust advanced network settings. To access this pane, navigate to [Setup] > [Network] > [Advanced]. The following screen will appear.
The following table describes the labels on this screen. Label DNS Server NTP Configuration HTTP Server 6.5.6 Description Set the DNS server to be found via DHCP, or enter a manual DNS address NTP stands for Network Time Protocol. To synchronize your camera’s clock with an NTP server, choose to either obtain an NTP server address via DHCP, or use an external NTP server (default address is pool.ntp.org) Set the HTTP port for your IP camera to be viewed and controlled from the internet.
To access the UPnP screen, navigate to [Settings] > [Network] > [UPnP]. The following screen will appear. Note: To enable UPnP on Windows, go to Add or Remove Programs in Control Panel, then click Add/Remove Windows Components, double-click “Network Services,” and check “UPnP User Interface.” 6.6 PTZ Control The PTZ control page allows you to manage your camera’s preset positions and configure patrol mode to allow the camera to patrol the preset positions. 6.6.1 6.6.1.
. To add preset points, follow these steps: 1) Use the directional buttons to navigate your IP camera to the desired position 2) Enter a position name into the “Position Name” field. 3) Press the “Add” button. a. If you would like to designate this as your camera’s ‘Home’ position, check the ‘Use the current position as “home”’ box. b.
6.6.1.3 PTZ Position Reset The PTZ Position reset menu allows you to reset the PTZ functionality back to factory defaults. There are two reset buttons: Button Calibrate PTZ Back to Factory Default Reset PTZ Home Position Back to Factory Default 6.6.2 Function Calibrates Pan/Tilt position back to factory defaults Resets the camera’s Home position back to factory default. Patrol Mode The Patrol Mode menu allows you to define your camera’s behavior while in patrol mode.
6.7 Event Setup From this page, your camera can be programmed to respond to events – such as detected motion, or a triggered I/O device – and send a snapshot directly to your e-mail account, ftp server, image server, notification server, HTTP server, or SMS server in order to warn you about what’s happened. 6.7.1 Event Servers This page provides 5 different server-types capable of receiving notification of events: Email, FTP, Image, Image, HTTP, and SMS.
To Address Authentication Method User Name Password Subject Save Clear Cancel 6.7.1.2 Enter the full e-mail address you wish to receive notifications. Login or Plain. For most e-mail servers, select Login. Enter your full username (ie. xxxx@xxx.com) Enter your e-mail account’s password Enter the subject line you want alert emails to have. Save settings Clear settings Cancel FTP Server This page allows you to set up your camera to automatically upload triggered snapshots to an FTP server.
6.7.1.3 Image Server This page allows you to set the file name that will be used when snapshots are taken. To access this page, navigate to [Setup] > [Event Setup] > [Event Server Setup] > [Image]. The following screen will appear. 6.7.1.4 SMS Server Your IP camera is capable of sending SMS notifications to one or more pre-defined recipients in case an event is triggered.
Target Cell Phone recipient’s mobile phone number Next Reset Clear Cancel Cell phone number of the recipient. Accept settings and move to the next page Reset settings Clear settings Cancel After you input your settings, click [Next]. The following page will appear. This page allows you to input the message that will be sent when an event is triggered. Enter your message, then click [Next]. The following screen will appear. This page will allow you to test your camera’s SMS functionality.
This page allows you to create, modify, or delete event triggers. To access the Trigger Setup page, navigate to [Setup] > [Event Setup] > [Trigger Setup]. The following screen will appear. To create an event trigger, click the [Create] button. The following screen will appear. The following table describes the fields in this screen. Field Event Trigger Schedule Motion Detection Next Cancel Description Set the trigger for this event.
Upon clicking [Next], users will be able to define actions to take when an event is triggered. Select the actions to be taken, then click [Finish] to complete trigger setup. 6.7.3 Motion Detection Motion Detection allows you to define regions that will trigger an event if motion is detected. Select a region, sensitivity level (S1: Lowest ~ S5: Highest) from the dropdown list, and then click and drag on the video display to define the region. Click [Save] for settings to take effect.
6.8 Recording Setup The recording setup page allows users to store video clips to local or remote storage. To enable, go to [setup] > [recording setup]. The following screen will appear. The following table describes the labels found within this screen: Label Description Dropdown Menu Allows the user to choose between saving to an NAS or NFS Use Domain Name Select Use Domain Name for NAS setup. For NFS, leave unchecked.
On this screen, you can select the dates and times you want the IPC-2605 to record. 6.8.1 Recording Playback In [Setup], click on [Recording History] located on the left menu, then playback menu will be shown as follows: To play recorded video, first select a video clip on the list (red square shown above). File format: AVI. The following table describes the labels found on this screen.
6.9 Recording History The Recording History page allows users to manage video clips that have been recorded by the camera. You’ll see a playback menu as displayed below. .The following table describes the labels found within this screen. Label Playback Download Protect/UnProtect Select All/Deselect/Delete Description Click to download then play the selected clip Click to download the selected clip to your PC Protected files will not be erased.
7 Event Viewer The Event Viewer allows you to view detailed logs of events which have been triggered. To access this page, navigate to [Setup], then select [Event Viewer] from the top panel. Select any type of event from the sidebar (Motion, Scheduled Triggers) to view that type’s history, or click on image links to view event-triggered snapshots.
8 Maintenance The Maintenance screen provides information about your IP camera, access to the history log, and system maintenance functions. 8.1 Information To access the Maintenance Information screen, navigate to [Setup], then select [Maintenance] from the top panel. The following screen will appear. 8.2 Log This page provides a system log for your camera. To access this page, navigate to [Setup], select [Maintenance] from the top panel, and then select [Log] from the side panel.
8.3.1 Reboot Camera Press the [Reboot] button to reboot your camera. 8.3.2 Profile Management Profile Management allows users to easily set up multiple cameras. After one camera is properly configured, users can export that camera’s configuration to a profile on their PC, which can then be loaded onto other cameras. This feature also serves as a backup in case settings need to be restored.
8.3.3 Reset All Settings to Default This will reset your camera to its factory default settings. All changes you’ve made will be lost. 8.3.4 Firmware Update Firmware updates are available at us.zyxel.com/support. After downloading the latest firmware for your camera, click the [Browse] button to locate the firmware file on your hard drive, then click the [Upgrade] button to update the camera’s firmware.
9 Troubleshooting During the course of installation, you might encounter various issues. The following section contains some troubleshooting procedures to help you solve these problems. 9.1 Reconfiguring Your Device Anytime you need to re-configure your IP camera, you can simply double-click on the eaZy Wizard icon to launch the eaZy Wizard configuration tool.
9.3 Resetting to Factory Defaults If you’ve forgotten your password, or your camera’s been acting generally strange, you can follow the steps below to reset the camera to its default settings. To reset the camera: 1) Press and hold the reset button (located on the camera’s rear panel) for approximately 10 seconds. When successful, you should see the status indicator light turn off. 2) After approximately 5 more seconds, the status indicator light should turn on again.
9.4 Trouble with Java After launching your browser and entering your camera’s IP address, you’ll be asked for the username and password combination (Default is admin/admin, case sensitive.) No User Interface in the Browser This issue could have three possible causes. 1) Java Virtual Machine was not installed. Follow the instructions on-screen to install Java, or you won’t have access to the user interface. 2) ActiveX was installed but not enabled.
3) Browser security settings. Ensure your browsers security settings allow the installation of Java by adding the IP address of the camera to the list of trusted sites in Internet Explorer. If you’ve gone through all above steps but still can’t obtain video/audio on your browser, close all browser windows and delete the ‘IPSurveillance Embedded” folder found in C:\Program Files.
9.5 Trouble with Remote Viewing on Browser You can view your camera’s video streams remotely over the Internet. If you’re having trouble viewing video remotely, refer to the section below for troubleshooting tips. The above figure depicts a typical setup in which: The IP camera has a static virtual IP address of 192.168.0.1 The WAN IP address at the IP camera site is 61.220.20.16 The client (user) is trying to receive the video/audio stream remotely.
After taking the above steps, you should be able to log into your IP camera from a remote location by entering the DDNS address or the static IP address into the navigation field of your web browser. For example, in this case, you could enter http://61.220.20.16:80 into the location field of Internet Explorer to access your IP camera. Important: If you have multiple IP cameras installed on a network, you’ll need to change the HTTP port manually so each camera uses a different port.
9.6 Symptoms, Causes, and Solutions Listed below are some common problems, and their solutions. Symptom Problems accessing from LAN network using web browser Possible Cause/Solution The entered IP address is incorrect. Make sure the IP address you entered matches the IP address of your camera. If you are certain that your camera is configured with the same subnet mask as that of your PC, you can first disconnect other cameras, then run the eaZy Wizard to scan for the camera on your network.
Symptom Scanning and connecting to wireless AP takes a long time Successful login to the camera, but no image is displayed Possible Cause/Solution Too many wireless APs nearby. The amount of time taken to scan wireless APs depends on the number of wireless APs around the camera. If there are too many wireless APs (30 or more), it may take as long as 3 minutes to complete the scanning process.
Symptom Network diagnosis shows error icon Problem using DDNS service Problem using eaZy Wizard Possible Cause/Solution Network connection error. The network connection test verifies that the camera has successfully connected to the LAN network. When the diagnosis result shows a red exclamation mark icon, it means that the camera fails to connect to the LAN network.
Symptom Part of the image becomes pixilated/Image artifacts appear Possible Cause/Solution Network bandwidth is insufficient. Without sufficient bandwidth, video quality will deteriorate and image errors like pixilation or frame-drop may occur. When you view your camera remotely from the Internet, your camera needs sufficient upload bandwidth to transmit video stream and you need sufficient download bandwidth to download video stream at the remote location.
Symptom A warning message appears stating “Your video quality is too high for your Internet bandwidth.” Possible cause/solution Network quality is not high enough. This means the camera’s browser interface, WebVUer, could not receive a steady stream of video data from your camera. The loss of video data might also be caused by network congestion or insufficient bandwidth. Please refer to other related troubleshooting tips.
10 Technical Specifications Category Camera Video Audio Network Firmware IPC-2605N Image Sensor 1/7” CMOS Progressive Scan Sensor Lens Pan Range Focal Length: 2.0mm Max Aperture Ratio: F2.8 Fixed Iris -170° ~ +170°; total of 340 degrees Tilt Range -10° ~ +90°; total of 100 degrees Max Speed Pan 60°/sec., Tilt 50°/sec. Zoom 10x Digital zoom Angle of View 50° horizontal Focus Range 0.
Web Browser Category Internet Explorer (ActiveX) Supported Devices Mobile Phone General MJPEG Mode Operating Conditions Power Supply System Requirements IPC-2605N Remotely view and configure camera on Internet Explorer Alarm and event management: FTP, I/O alarm, server notification, SMS/Email alert PC, Laptop, Tablet, Nettop, MID with IE/ActiveX support Viewing in MJEPEG mode on mobile phone, iPhone/iPad, BlackBerry, Android, Windows Mobile, PDA Viewing of camera image via phone browsers 5°C ~40°C
11 Open-Sourced Components 3rd Party Software Addgroup Adduser Ash AVN-IPv4LL Busybox Cat Chattr Chgrp Chmod Chown ComproRTSP Version V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 Cp Cttyhack Date Dd Delgroup Deluser Df Dmesg Echo Egrep Email Ethtool False Fgrep ftp Grep Gnuzip Gzip Hostname Htpasswd Ip Ipaddr Iplink Iproute Iptables Iptables-multi Iptables-restore Iptables-save iwconfig V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.
Iwlist Iwpriv Kill Ln Login Ls Lsattr Mini_httpd Mkdir Mkdosfs Mknod Mktemp More Mount Mountpoint Mv Netstat Nice Ping Ping6 Ps Pwd Rm Sed Sh Sleep Stat Stty Stunnel Su Sync Tar Touch True Umount Uname Upnpc-static Vi Watch Zcat Ld-2.11.so Ld-linux.so.3 Libc.so Libc.so.6 V29 V29 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.19 V1.13.4 V2.11 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.
Libc-2.11.so Libcrypt.so Libcrypt.so.1 Libcrypt-2.11.so Libcrypto.so Libcrypto.so.0.9.8 Libdl.so Libdl.so.2 Libdl-2.11.so Libgcc_s.so Libgcc_s.so.1 Libip4tc.a Libip4tc.la Libip6tc.a Libip6tc.la Libiptc.a Libiptc.la Libiw.so.29 Libixml.so Libixml.so.2 Libixml.so.2.0.2 Libm.so Libm.so.6 Libm-2.11.so Libnsl.so Libnsl.so.1 Libnsl-2.11.so Libnss_dns.so Libnss_dns.so.2 Libnss_dns-2.11.so Libnss_files.so Libnss_files.so.2 libnss_files-2.11.so Libpthread.so Libpthread.so.0 Libpthread-2.11.so Libresolv.so Libresolv.
Libsockipc.so.1.2 Libssl.so Libssl.so.0.9.8 Libstdc++.so Libstdc++.so.6.0.11 Libthread_db.so Libthread_db.so.1 Libthread_db-1.0.so Libthreadutil.so Libthreadutil.so.2 Libthreadutil.so.2.0.2 Libupnp.so Libupnp.so.2 Libupnp.so.2.0.2 Libutil.so Libutil.so.1 Libutil-2.11.so Libxtables.a Libxtables.la Adjtimex Arp Blkid Depmod devmem Fdisk Freeramdisk Fsck Fsck.minix Getty Halt Hwclock Ifconfig Ifdown Ifup Init Insmod Klogd Logread Losetup Lsmod makedevs Mdev Mkds.minix Mkswap Modprove V2.11 V0.98m V0.98m V4.4.
Pivot_root Poweroff Reboot Rmmod Route Runlevel Start-stop-daemon Sulogin Swapoff Swapon Switch_root Sysctl Syslogd Udhcpc Watchdog haserl V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V1.13.4 V0.9.
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This product contains addgroup, adduser, ash, busybox, cat, chattr, chgrp, chmod, chown, cp, cttyhack, date, dd, delgroup, deluser, df, dmesg, echo, egrep, false, fgrep, grep, gnuzip, gzip, hostname, ip, ipaddr, iplink, iproute, kill, ln, login, ls, lsattr, mkdir, mknod, mktemp, more, mount, mountpoint, mv, netstat, nice, ping, ping6, ps, pwd, rm, sed, sh, sleep, stat, sty, su, sync, tar, touch, true, umount, uname, usleep, vi, watch, zcat, adjtimex, arp, blkid, depmod, devmem, fdisk, freeramdisk, fsck, fsc
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c) Convey individual copies of the object code with a copy of the written offer to provide the Corresponding Source. This alternative is allowed only occasionally and noncommercially, and only if you received the object code with such an offer, in accord with subsection 6b. d) Convey the object code by offering access from a designated place (gratis or for a charge), and offer equivalent access to the Corresponding Source in the same way through the same place at no further charge.
7. Additional Terms. “Additional permissions” are terms that supplement the terms of this License by making exceptions from one or more of its conditions. Additional permissions that are applicable to the entire Program shall be treated as though they were included in this License, to the extent that they are valid under applicable law.
license, and (b) permanently, if the copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
Each contributor grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license under the contributor's essential patent claims, to make, use, sell, offer for sale, import and otherwise run, modify and propagate the contents of its contributor version. In the following three paragraphs, a “patent license” is any express agreement or commitment, however denominated, not to enforce a patent (such as an express permission to practice a patent or covenant not to sue for patent infringement).
part which is the covered work, but the special requirements of the GNU Affero General Public License, section 13, concerning interaction through a network will apply to the combination as such. 14. Revised Versions of this License. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the GNU General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. To do so, attach the following notices to the program.
12 Canadian Regulatory Disclaimer English Version: This device complies with Industry Canada licence-exempt RSS standard(s). Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause interference, and (2) This device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. French Version: Le présent appareil est conforme aux CNR d'Industrie Canada applicables aux appareils radio exempts de licence.