@motkaintzar.00: #CapCut

motkaintzar 00
motkaintzar 00
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Saturday 27 June 2026 02:25:46 GMT
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misssunaina5
Miss Sunaina :
2026-06-27 02:36:21
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misssunaina02
Sunaina :
2026-06-27 03:21:35
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ravgill001
ravgill001 :
Awesome video 👍👍👍👍👍👍
2026-06-27 09:46:29
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naila_sha1
Mirza :
💯👍
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Shan Bahi :
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SHANi ViRK ”BRAND” :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰😉😉😉😉😉😉自己sufyanvirk
2026-06-27 08:27:04
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misssunaina5
Miss Sunaina :
2026-06-27 02:36:18
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misssunaina5
Miss Sunaina :
2026-06-27 02:36:04
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layla.sha5
Layla Sha :
هنوز او رقم دوست پیدا میشه ؟؟؟؟؟🥺
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DB :
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Allah is the my best friend🫀 :
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Most people think CCTV installation is just about mounting cameras and connecting cables. But once you start handling multi-storey buildings, apartment complexes, malls, industrial parks, universities, hospitals, gated communities, or office blocks spread across expansive environments, you quickly realize the real backbone of the entire system is the network infrastructure behind it. One mistake still common in many installations is trying to run everything purely on CAT6 from building to building or floor to floor. CAT6 is excellent for short runs. Perfect for cameras connecting to nearby PoE switches. But when dealing with high-rise buildings, distributed blocks, long outdoor distances, or multiple structures sharing one surveillance system, the conversation changes completely. This is where fiber uplinks become critical. Instead of pushing heavy camera traffic through long copper runs, each building or floor can have its own PoE switch handling local cameras, then use fiber to send data back to the control room, server room, or core switch. The difference becomes massive: • Better transmission stability over long distances.  • Faster communication between buildings and floors.  • Reduced network congestion • Less signal degradation.  • Improved scalability when future expansion comes in.  • Better protection against electrical interference, lightning, and surges.  • Easier integration of additional blocks, gates, parking areas, and perimeter surveillance.  • More reliable centralized monitoring across large environments.  In real projects where developments continue growing both vertically and horizontally, this approach makes future maintenance, upgrades, and troubleshooting much easier. You also avoid situations where one overloaded cable path affects an entire surveillance ecosystem. Another overlooked advantage is fault isolation. With a properly structured fiber backbone, faults can be isolated building by building or floor by floor instead of disrupting the entire network while searching for problems. A properly designed CCTV system today is no longer just a security installation. It’s network engineering, infrastructure planning, storage management, redundancy design, and long-term reliability all combined together. The cameras may be what people see. But the fiber backbone and network architecture behind them determine whether the system will still perform reliably years later. #CCTV #FiberOptics #NetworkInfrastructure #SurveillanceSystems #PoESwitch
Most people think CCTV installation is just about mounting cameras and connecting cables. But once you start handling multi-storey buildings, apartment complexes, malls, industrial parks, universities, hospitals, gated communities, or office blocks spread across expansive environments, you quickly realize the real backbone of the entire system is the network infrastructure behind it. One mistake still common in many installations is trying to run everything purely on CAT6 from building to building or floor to floor. CAT6 is excellent for short runs. Perfect for cameras connecting to nearby PoE switches. But when dealing with high-rise buildings, distributed blocks, long outdoor distances, or multiple structures sharing one surveillance system, the conversation changes completely. This is where fiber uplinks become critical. Instead of pushing heavy camera traffic through long copper runs, each building or floor can have its own PoE switch handling local cameras, then use fiber to send data back to the control room, server room, or core switch. The difference becomes massive: • Better transmission stability over long distances. • Faster communication between buildings and floors. • Reduced network congestion • Less signal degradation. • Improved scalability when future expansion comes in. • Better protection against electrical interference, lightning, and surges. • Easier integration of additional blocks, gates, parking areas, and perimeter surveillance. • More reliable centralized monitoring across large environments. In real projects where developments continue growing both vertically and horizontally, this approach makes future maintenance, upgrades, and troubleshooting much easier. You also avoid situations where one overloaded cable path affects an entire surveillance ecosystem. Another overlooked advantage is fault isolation. With a properly structured fiber backbone, faults can be isolated building by building or floor by floor instead of disrupting the entire network while searching for problems. A properly designed CCTV system today is no longer just a security installation. It’s network engineering, infrastructure planning, storage management, redundancy design, and long-term reliability all combined together. The cameras may be what people see. But the fiber backbone and network architecture behind them determine whether the system will still perform reliably years later. #CCTV #FiberOptics #NetworkInfrastructure #SurveillanceSystems #PoESwitch

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