Hey neighbors! Chiming in for Tom here. The error that you are running into is actually by design. You can read more about this in our Community post about this feature update here, but the note in particular to call out from the article is as follows: " Note: Motion zones can not be extended to the full area of your Live View when creating these zones. This is because the area your camera covers is slightly larger than the area your motion sensors cover."

Please note that you may not be able to cover your full live view, but the boxes you are drawing is the area that your motion sensor on your battery device can cover. You will not run into this when drawing zones for hardwired/powered devices such as the Ring Pro, as the motion sensing technology in it if from Advanced Pixel Detection and not PIR Motion Sensors like the battery devices. Hope this helps clear this up for you!


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They are still advertising adjustable custom motion zones on Amazon and other retail. I just discovered this dysfunction and will be phasing out my entire ring system of 6 cameras and doorbell. Bubye Ring

Ansel Adams wrote a deeply descriptive book detailing the Zone System called The Negative, which can be found on Amazon. It takes the reader on an in-depth journey into the Zone System. For our purposes, I have made up a basic diagram, followed by a synopsis of his narrative concerning the zones.

Since we are all connected so easily to the internet, there are also plenty of sites explaining the Zone System in implicit detail. I want this blog to be more about how to have the concept in the back of your mind while out taking images. You will see 11 zones, each allocated a Roman numeral, 0 being black and X (or 10) being white, with various shades of gray in-between. Let me explain the process in photographic terms.

Often, we find ourselves in a situation where our proposed image has too much contrast so we have to think about what we are looking for. I am referring to high dynamic range. It may be that bracketing is in order for some serious post-processing, or we can make a decision as we acquire the image. I would vote for protecting your highlights most of the time, unless they are not the focus of the image. Photography is always a choice, and rules are made to be broken, but the key is to know when you are breaking the rules. There are many happy mistakes, but how hard is it to go back and capture that same mistake once more?

A closing thought concerning Ansel Adams. While on my journey to attempt to recreate something akin to his amazing work, I became enthralled with infrared photography. I found, of course, that much of what I have referred to above needed to be manipulated in post-production, but if any of you are interested, I am happy to chat with you about working with a converted camera. I have a few blogs posted on the Life Pixel site, and have included a couple of images below. It goes without saying that I could not capture any of these images without my tried and trusted tripods from Really Right Stuff!

This document is intended for Citrix technical professionals, IT decision makers, partners, and architects who want to explore image management services with Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops either in on-premises or cloud environments. The reader must have a basic understanding of Citrix products, hypervisors, and cloud frameworks.

This document provides an overview of product functionality and design architecture for an image management environment to ensure efficient delivery of application and desktop workloads for an organization. The document is focused on Citrix image management services with conceptual deployment scenarios.

Image management services, fit into the Control, Platform, and Operations layers to manage virtual machines in the Resource layer. The following sections go through the Citrix Machine Creation Services (MCS) and Citrix Provisioning (PVS) concepts as these are the basic building blocks of image management in a Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops environment.

Image Management is an approach of creating a master or golden image that contains the operating systems and all the required applications to deliver that single virtual image to multiple target virtual machines. The key concept behind image management is reusability and simplified management, which allow the Citrix administrator to deliver the necessary operating systems with the required set of applications to appropriate users based on their needs.

Citrix Machine Creation Services is a component of the Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops solution that is coupled within the Delivery Controller. Using application programming interfaces (APIs) from the underlying hypervisor or cloud provider, MCS builds intelligent linked clones from a master image to provision multiple virtual desktops. The clones include a differencing disk and an identity disk linked from a base disk.

Citrix Provisioning streams a single shared disk image to multiple individual machines rather than copying images to them. Citrix Provisioning enables organizations to reduce the number of disk images that they have to manage, even when the number of machines continues to grow.

Also, machines are streaming from a single shared image in real time, machine image consistency is ensured, at the same time large pools of machines can completely change their configuration, applications, and even operating systems all within the time it takes to reboot. This best-in class approach enables organizations to install and update the security and application patches to a single shared image in minimal time while meeting business objectives.

Citrix Machine Creation Service (MCS) plays a vital role in image management for Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops environments. Citrix MCS services are coupled with the Citrix Delivery Controller and Cloud Connector hence it does not require any additional servers or infrastructure. With MCS, IT administrators simply access the Citrix Studio Console to create and deliver the virtual desktops and server images to the enterprise users either on-premises or with Citrix Cloud.

The administrator creates a virtual machine with the required OS, installs the necessary applications and Citrix Virtual Delivery Agent on the hypervisor or in the cloud. The IT administrator selects this as the master virtual machine to provision a group of virtual desktops or servers using the Citrix Studio management console. Citrix MCS creates a snapshot of master the VM and it copies the full snapshot to the storage repository to serve as the master image (base disk).

The first step when using Citrix MCS is to provision a master VM that serves as a template to create clones. The IT administrator can provision the VM with the required amount of CPU, RAM and disk space, and then install an operating system and required applications. Using the Citrix Studio Console, the admin creates a machine catalog of clone VMs using the base image. Those VMs live in a data store, which is different from PVS.

Citrix MCS creates the number of VMs specified in the create catalog wizard with two disks defined for each VM on the storage. A copy of the master image is also stored in the same storage repository. If there are multiple storage repositories defined, then each one gets the following types of disks.

For these reasons, MCS added a new capability in addition to creating the existing delta structure called full clones. When using persistent VMs, Citrix MCS allows admins to select VMs to be created with a full clone of the master image.

Collections of physical or virtual machines are managed as a single entity called a Machine Catalog in Citrix environments. While creating Machine Catalogs administrators have the option to select ways to provision VMs, and which Citrix image management tools such as Citrix Machine Creation Services or Provisioning Services.

The hypervisor provides optimization technologies through read caching of the disk images locally. For example, Citrix Hypervisor (formerly XenServer) offers IntelliCache. This reduces network traffic to the central storage.

Local storage stores data locally on the hypervisor local data store. This includes, master images and other OS data that are, transferred to all of the hypervisors in the site. This method increases network traffic along with management traffic.

Instruction Disk: This small instruction disk contains the steps of the image preparation to run and is attached to that VM. The preparation virtual machine is then started, the image preparation process begins, and the virtual machine is shut down.

Installing the latest hypervisor tools on the golden image is required so that applications and desktops function normally. It is advised to not run Sysprep on master images as MCS handles machine identity itself.

Capacity Considerations: When VMs are created using Citrix MCS a minimum of two disks are created: one is the delta disk containing the OS as copied from the master image and the other one is the identity disk (16 MB) containing Active Directory identity data for each VM. Extra disks can be added to satisfy certain use cases.

In medium and large-scale deployment, resource consumption is more as end user demand grows, it is recommended to deploy optimized images so that unwanted applications will not consume excessive resources.

Citrix Provisioning is different from traditional imaging solutions, fundamentally changing the relationship between hardware and the software that runs on it. A shared disk image is streamed over the network rather than copied to individual virtual machines. Citrix Provisioning enables enterprises to reduce the number of images that they have to manage and also provides centralized management with distributed processing.

A Provisioning Server is a server that has the Citrix Provisioning Soap and Citrix Stream Services installed. The Stream Service is used to stream software from virtual disk images, or vDisks to target devices. The Soap Service is used when accessing the console. Provisioning Servers are used to stream the contents of a vDisk file (containing a machine image) to target devices. vDisk files can reside directly on the Provisioning Server local hard disk or Provisioning Servers can access the vDisks from a shared-storage device on the network. 2351a5e196

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