Getting Started
Once you have successfully deployed and configured FindFace Multi, it’s time to open the web interface, and get started. In this chapter, you can find a recommended sequence of steps that will help you harness your system’s complete functionality.
In this chapter:
Gear Up for Work
Perform the primary configuration of your system:
Log into your system.
Choose the language and dark or light theme.
Organize Cameras
Create a new camera group or use the default one. A camera group is an entity that allows you to group cameras subject to their physical location. For example, cameras at the same entrance to a building can be combined into one camera group.
Add cameras to the camera group and check their statuses.
You may also need:
Configure your system to process video from the group of cameras at their physical location. It may come in handy in a distributed architecture. Learn more.
Consider enabling event deduplication if observation scenes of cameras within the group overlap. This feature allows you to exclude coinciding object recognition events among cameras belonging to the same group. Learn more.
Organize Watch Lists and Record Index
Create a new watch list or use the default one. A watch list is an entity that allows you to classify objects (faces, bodies, vehicles) by arbitrary criteria, e.g., persona non grata, wanted, VIP, staff, etc.
Upload records and add them to the watch list either manually, in bulk via the web interface, or use the console bulk upload function.
You may also need:
Customize record content. Create additional fields, tabs, and search filters.
Start Monitoring Objects
By default, FindFace Multi is monitoring only unmatched objects. To enable a watch list monitoring, make this list active. You can also turn on sound notifications and request manual acknowledgment for the events associated with the list.
You may also need:
Enable automatic clustering of objects of the same origin: face/body images belonging to the same person, images of the same vehicle.
Support laws related to the processing of personal data of individuals (GDPR and similar). Learn more.
Organize Video Surveillance
Create a camera layout for essential video surveillance.
You may also need:
For advanced video surveillance, enable Video Recorder.
Count People and Vehicles. Measure Distance between People
Set up counters to count faces, bodies, and vehicles on connected cameras. You can also configure counters to measure distance between bodies. The Counters possibilities can apply to a wide range of situations, such as people counting in queues and waiting areas, monitoring public gatherings, crowding prevention, health protocol enforcement, traffic jam detection, and more.
FindFace Multi in Action
Automatically identify objects (faces, bodies, vehicles) in live video and check them against watch lists. Work with the event history by using various filters.
Harness the episodes. An episode is a set of identification events that feature objects of the same origin (face and body images of the same person and images of the same vehicle) detected within a certain period. As events on the Events tab show up in an arbitrary order, a large number of miscellaneous events can make the work challenging and unproductive. With the Episodes, the system uses AI to organize incoming events based on the objects similarity and detection time. This allows for the effortless processing of diverse events, even in large numbers.
Search for objects in the database of detected objects and card index. Learn more.
Search archived videos for objects under monitoring.
Manually compare two objects and verify that they match.
Build detailed reports on object recognition events, episodes, search events, clusters, counters, cameras, card index, audience, or audit logs.
Basic Maintenance
Go Further
Set up webhooks to automatically send notifications about specific events, episodes, and counter records to a given URL. In this case, when such an event occurs, FindFace Multi will send an HTTP request to the URL configured for the webhook. You can use webhooks for various purposes, for example, to notify a user about a particular event, invoke required behavior on a target website, and solve security tasks such as automated access control. Learn more.
Harness the FindFace Multi functions through HTTP API.