Securing your premises from unwanted guests and protecting your staff and assets is a big issue for any company. An Access control system from ITS offers safety features with the added advantage of linking into Time and Attendance systems.
Linked with a Time & Attendance system you get the full benefit of knowing who is on site at any time, the Time and Attendance software can also be configured to automatically produce printed or emailed reports on activation of your fire alarm system, providing details of all persons on site at the time. We design system installations to meet your exact needs thus ensuring maximum efficiency and best value for money. We are always happy to offer advice and guidance where required. |
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| Major Features |
| Dynamic memory usage - choose personnel versus punches stored. Up to 5000 employees can be stored in the Attend, depending on which personnel options are enabled. |
| Offline operation. In this mode the Attend will verify badges autonomously, open doors, store punches in its internal buffer. It can show personal information to the employee. This information is uploaded from the host. |
| Access control is based on terminal schedules, week tables and access day schemes. |
| Input monitoring. The Attend can monitor doors and gates and generates alarms when they remain open after a time-out or are forced without valid badge. |
| Each person can have up to 11 individual info-screens. |
| Acoustic devices like sirens can be driven up to ten times a day. |
| Open zones, which are time-frames where doors are automatically opened, are available. |
| Alarm connection. The Attend can enable/disable alarm systems via key employees. |
| Safe buffer management. Punches are stored in a ring-buffer. This ring buffer can be protected against overwriting. |
| As long as old (non-protected) data is not overwritten, one can retrieve old punches, even if they were already read. This recovery function can come in very handy when the punches on the PC get lost due to a disk crash. |
| Free programmable keyboard. Keys can be set up to ask for extra information, such as a job number. |
| Validation lists. When a key requires extra information, the Attend can do an autonomous verification of the information entered. A scroll utility is provided to eliminate undefined entries. |
| The master terminal can drive 7 individual slaves, which emulate the master operation. |
| The terminal hardware is configured by a built-in hardware setup routine. |
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