That is not what hotspot is...hotspot makes the area super sensitive...see help fileWait... what's wrong with hotspots? I don't use them as hotspots per se, but I do use the feature to block out a few areas where I don't want motion to trigger an alert. My cameras are continuously recording though, so maybe that's why I've not seen an issue?
Hotspots bypass any scrutinizing over rules and throws a trigger. You mean masking?
If you put a hotspot up it will trip on anything and everything. Clouds, rain, bugs, etc. When I set mine up I am tweaking to weed out as much crap as possible while still being reliable for human detection. Hotspots will trip on a light kicking on outside, a moth, spider web, etc. You will already be fighting to avoid those annoying aspects of motion detection. Hotspot just makes it impossible to filter those out.
Ok, I guess we are being that pedantic "Hotspot" zones as you describe them are only those which are in red. Per the help file:
"Zones A-G are shown in green, while zone H is shown in red because it's the "hotspot" zone."
So yes, what I am describing is using the zones and hotspot feature to mask off an area that is of no interest or is likely to cause too many false alerts.
Yes. If you are relying on BI to protect your family and valuables you need to test and test and test. And when you think you have it right you get a day where the sun changes the view so drastic that it drives you nuts with false triggers. It's not a one day job. Use the feature that lets you see what BI is tripping on with footage you already have. Either that or you will start ignoring the alerts you receive because you won't trust the trigger.
I'm sorry you took me as talking down to you. I'm sitting here putting a roof on my brother in laws house trying to help you.
you keep misusing the hotspot term..hotspot is one thing and one thing only as explained in the help file..its zone H and will make that area super sensitive and should not be used with alerts or you will get tons of false positives as the help file points out....the only way the OP is getting false alerts with his poor settings is because he is using the hotspot.While I can appreciate the effort, you didn't actually answer my question but repeated information I said I already knew.
you keep misusing the hotpost term..hotspot is one thing and one thing only as explained in the help file..its zone H and will make that area super sensitive and should not be used with alerts or you will get tons of false positives as the help file points out....