EN-Feature Notes

EN - Sipelia Public Addressing

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The public addressing feature of Sipelia™ facilitates the transmission of live, text-to-speech, and pre-recorded audio across multiple SIP devices. Operators can broadcast messages directly from their monitoring interface across their premises, speeding up response and coordination. Get your message across rapidly When events require the notification of security personnel, employees, patrons, or visitors on your premises, independent systems force you to alternate between applications or issue your message multiple times through different channels. This slows down response and forces operators to learn numerous interfaces, decreasing their confidence . A better approach Sipelia lets operators manually or automatically broadcast messages from the same interface to monitor video, events, and other data points, notifying all users (security desk or mobile). They can play live, text-to-speech, and pre-recorded audio to groups containing devices connected to your system—no need to switch between applications or take your eyes off the situation. Key benefits Automatic or manual broadcasting of messages to multiple devices Direct access from the monitoring interface Works with a broad range of audio devices Supports live, text-to-speech, and pre-recorded messages Public addressing Rapidly broadcast information to anyone How it works Feature note Applications: Security Center, Sipelia™ Industry: Education, Public Safety, Transportation, Stadiums and Open Spaces Category: Operations, Security System administrators can add devices such as speakers, intercoms, door stations, users (security desk or mobile), and VoIP phones to one or more paging zones. Paging zones can also include other paging zones that will be called when an operator activates the parent zone. Each zone can have a series of messages in MP3 or WAV file format. Operators can quickly select the relevant announcement, limiting clutter and helping them issue the correct directions in an emergency. Finally, a default timeout duration can be set per zone. This will define how long each device has to answer the call before the message is played. Operators can overrule the timer at any time. Paging zones are shown in the monitoring interface's address book alongside individual devices, users, and ring groups. When operators activate a paging zone, they can select which message to broadcast. Once the timeout finishes, the message is played to all devices that have answered the call. This can also be done using automated actions and workflows.

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