HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR BUILDING NETWORK?

VISUAL BACNET FOR BUILDING MANAGERS

Determining the health of a building network is difficult, yet extremely valuable. In an age of convergence, building systems often have a number of contractors working on them, adding devices and continuously optimizing the system. But what happens when a vendor adds a service that floods the network, and causes performance degradation? Suddenly, the project manager is left trying to figure out what happened and who is responsible. Join us as we discuss how Visual BACnet™ is built to track changes made by the increasing number of vendors collaborating on BACnet systems. Learn how Visual BACnet™ is designed with the priorities of facility managers to make BACnet system benchmarking easier than it has ever been.

The latest release from Visual BACnet brings huge convenience and time saving for users with JACE controllers. Now, you can capture BACnet data quickly and easily, sending it right from your JACE to Visual BACnet for analysis.

Need help with your BACnet network? Want to improve your BACnet Network Health overall, so sudden issues don’t devastate the system?

Do you waste time on repetitive tasks, like entering in static IP addresses? Do you wait forever to get a block of IP addresses from IT that you can use? 

Do you need help analyzing and solving a problematic BACnet network? Send your pcaps in, and our team of BACnet buffs will show you how they dig into files, from start to finish.

Visual BACnet is a powerful visualization tool for building automation system service providers.

BACnet is a widely used protocol for building networks that provides many benefits for connected building automation systems. But there are many issues that commonly plague BACnet networks.

Find out all the power and control you can get out of Optigo OneView.

What are MAC addresses, and how can you use them to help secure your network? Learn how OneClick Secure from Optigo OneView helps you secure your Operational Technology network in an instant.

An Operational Technology network can be made up of unmanaged switches, managed switches, or a centralized Network Management System (NMS). Learn about the differences between these different systems, and some of the pros and cons of each.