REDUCING FINGERPOINTING

PINPOINTING PROBLEMS IN YOUR BACNET SYSTEM

How do you know if something has been misconfigured? Do you spend days wondering who is responsible for the recent outage? Failures can go unnoticed for a long time and cause catastrophic problems at inconvenient times. Currently, technicians don’t know something is wrong until a customer complains, and the days spent fixing it can leave customers very unhappy.

Join us with special guest Gary Brancato, Controls Engineer at Princeton University to learn how they use Visual BACnet to pin-point problems in their BACnet system. We will discuss how users of all skill levels can drill down further into the user friendly dashboards to find problematic BACnet frames and access specific device parameters. Visual BACnet™’s quick and easy visualization presents the information in a way that is easy to understand. Problems that have yet to be found can be identified, and the right people can be brought in to fix them before the misconfigurations cause real issues. Stay one step ahead of your customer and have fewer emergency fixes and more time for proper fixes.

Flickering lights. Erratic heating. Slow or missing data. One tiny little strand of wire can cause big problems on your MS/TP networks.
Join Ryan Hughson, Optigo Networks’ Manager of Building Solutions, and Monica McMahen, Marketing Manager, as they detail the ins and outs of duplicate BBMDs.

Join Ryan Hughson and Monica McMahen as they discuss circular networks. How does a circular network happen, and how can you recognize it? How do you fix it, and how is it identified in Visual BACnet? All of this in less than 10 minutes!

On September 10, 2016, Optigo Networks launched Visual BACnet, the advanced visualization tool for Building Automation System (BAS) service providers. One year later, how has Visual BACnet evolved?
How do duplicate networks happen? What can you do to spot duplicate networks in Visual BACnet, and how can you prevent them in the future?
Getting regular captures of your building network is crucial to understanding its behaviour. Without daily or weekly insights into your network health, you can’t possibly begin to improve it.
Power over Ethernet (PoE) is the rising star of the building automation and security industry. Cameras, access control, lighting and HVAC devices can be powered and communicate on the network with just a single Ethernet connection.

When Australian energy analytics company BUENO Systems used to start working with a new building, they would have no idea what was happening on the building’s network.

Operational technology (OT) — including HVAC, lighting, and security — is regularly managed by IT departments alongside computers and phones.