Workstations & Terminals
Showing Results for Workstations & Terminals
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PioneerPOS
SKU: AC8XJQ050035
PioneerPOS Cyp J1900 8G W10E Wifi Prnt USB - AC8XJQ050035
- Intel Celeron J1900 quad-core handles POS workflows without stalling at peak load.
- 8GB RAM supports concurrent POS software, display output, and background reporting.
- USB printer port enables direct receipt printer connection without additional adapters.
$2,823.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: HC8FNFG50031
Pioneerpos Cyp Pcap 2.9 8G 120SD LT21 Web Wifi - HC8FNFG50031
- 2.9" PCAP touchscreen eliminates mechanical wear across high-volume transaction cycles.
- 8GB RAM supports concurrent POS processes and browser-based terminal emulation.
- 120GB SSD caches transactions locally, sustaining operation through WiFi dropouts.
$3,272.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: KCFFMF0M001Z
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i3 16G 120SD W11P TPM WiFi - KCFFMF0M001Z
- Intel i3 + 16GB DDR4 handles concurrent POS apps and USB peripherals without bottleneck.
- 120GB SSD delivers 30–45 sec cold-start boot, reducing downtime in high-traffic deployments.
- Windows 11 Pro with TPM 2.0 and 802.11ac WiFi supports wireless, policy-managed installs.
$3,778.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MAW-KC8FNF-32
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I3 8G 120SD LT21 Msr - MAW-KC8FNF-32
- Intel Core i3 with 8GB RAM handles concurrent POS tasks without latency.
- 120GB SSD enables fast boot, app load, and local transaction log caching.
- Integrated PCAP touchscreen and MSR reduce peripheral count at the counter.
$2,904.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH1-KC8FNF-54
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I3 8G 120SD LT21 USB Eps USB - MH1-KC8FNF-54
- Intel i3 CPU with 8GB RAM sustains concurrent POS apps without display lag.
- 120GB SSD eliminates mechanical drive failures in high-vibration counter installs.
- Native USB ports integrate thermal printer, scanner, and card reader hub-free.
$4,003.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH1-KC8FNF-84
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I3 8G 120SD LTSC2021 Eps - MH1-KC8FNF-84
- Windows LTSC 2021 eliminates forced update cycles and extends vendor support life.
- 120GB SSD enables fast boot and reliable transaction log writes at the counter.
- Serial connectivity supports legacy peripheral integration without additional adapters.
$4,003.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH1-KC8FKF-83
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i3 8G 120SD W10LTSC 2x20 - MH1-KC8FKF-83
- Windows 10 LTSC delivers change-controlled stability with extended support through 2032.
- Intel Core i3 with 8 GB DDR4 handles H.264/H.265 software decoding for live-view workloads.
- Dual 20-pin serial connectors maintain backward compatibility with badge readers and printers.
$4,003.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH1-KC8FPF-51
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I3 8G 120SD W11 Ltsc USB - MH1-KC8FPF-51
- Intel Core i3 with 8GB DDR4 handles concurrent POS, inventory, and payment workloads.
- Windows 11 LTSC eliminates unscheduled feature updates, keeping terminals stable long-term.
- 120GB SSD reduces boot times and eliminates mechanical failure risk in high-cycle deployments.
$4,124.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: KC8FMF0M003Z
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i3 8G 120SD W11 Pro TPM WiFi - KC8FMF0M003Z
- PCAP touch input registers via standard HID — works with any Windows 11 Pro POS app.
- TPM 2.0 enables BitLocker and domain-joined security policies for enterprise retail nets.
- Wall-mount bracket included; WiFi supports 802.11 roaming where hardwired drops are absent.
$3,778.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: KC8FMF0M001Z
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i3 8G 120SD W11Pro TPM WiFi - KC8FMF0M001Z
- Intel Core i3 with 8GB RAM handles 4–16 camera VMS client workloads without contention.
- 120GB SSD sustains 24/7 operation with no mechanical failure risk for OS and cache storage.
- Windows 11 Pro with TPM 2.0 enables BitLocker, group policy, and domain-joined deployments.
$3,778.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH1-KC8FPF-54
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I3 8G 120SD WIN11LTSC USB - MH1-KC8FPF-54
- Intel Core i3 CPU with 8GB RAM handles concurrent POS, inventory, and payment workloads.
- 120GB SSD ensures fast boot times and eliminates mechanical failure risk in busy deployments.
- Windows 11 LTSC delivers long-term OS stability without forced updates, protecting legacy integrations.
$4,394.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: MH9-NCFGPF-58
PioneerPOS Cyp Pcap I5 16G 240SD W11 Ltsc Tpm - MH9-NCFGPF-58
- Intel Core i5 with 16GB RAM handles concurrent POS, VMS, and access-control workloads.
- Windows 11 LTSC eliminates forced updates, ensuring uptime stability on 24/7 cashier terminals.
- 240GB SSD delivers fast boot cycles and removes mechanical failure risk in high-vibration sites.
$4,918.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: NC8FNFG50031
Pioneerpos Cyp Pcap I5 2.1GHZ 8G 120SD LTSC2021 - NC8FNFG50031
- Intel i5 2.1GHz with 8GB RAM handles concurrent POS transactions and RTSP stream decoding.
- Windows LTSC 2021 eliminates forced updates, supporting locked-down change-control environments.
- Built-in Wi-Fi reduces site cabling complexity for networked POS and surveillance deployments.
$3,961.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: NC8FMF0M003Z
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i5 8G 120SD W11 Pro TPM WiFi - NC8FMF0M003Z
- Intel Core i5 with 8GB RAM and 120GB SSD handles concurrent POS and VMS workloads.
- Windows 11 Pro with TPM 2.0 meets enterprise security baselines for managed deployments.
- PCAP touchscreen and WiFi connectivity support wall-mount installs without counter space.
$4,220.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: NC8GCFD50031
PioneerPOS CYP PCAP i5 8G 240SD W10P WEB+Speakers - NC8GCFD50031
- Intel Core i5 with 8GB RAM handles concurrent POS apps and cloud sync without lag.
- 240GB SSD cuts boot-to-transaction time and buffers offline transactions during outages.
- PCAP multi-touch accepts bare, gloved, or stylus input with no calibration drift.
$4,130.99 -
PioneerPOS
SKU: NC8GCFG50031
Pioneerpos Cyp Pcap I5 8GB 240SD W10P Web Wifi - NC8GCFG50031
- Fanless passive cooling eliminates moving parts, reducing maintenance and acoustic footprint.
- Intel Core i5 with 8GB DDR and 240GB SSD supports concurrent POS and payment workloads.
- Integrated Wi-Fi enables flexible terminal placement without dedicated Ethernet runs.
$4,101.99
Workstations & Terminals
Surveillance workstations and terminals provide the computing power required for live monitoring, playback, and video management software (VMS) operation. Designed for control rooms and security desks, these systems ensure smooth performance in high-camera-count environments.
Plan Your Deployment
- Camera count and simultaneous live view requirements
- VMS compatibility and hardware specifications
- GPU and decoding performance needs
- Monitor output configuration and multi-display setup
- Control room ergonomics and operator workflow planning
Workstations & Terminals — Engineering-Grade Video Recording & Storage for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 13 working models of workstations & terminals sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.
What to Look For
Channel count and supported resolution define the recorder's ceiling. A 16-channel NVR rated for 8MP per channel is a different product from a 16-channel rated for 2MP — the latter throttles your future camera upgrades. Read the per-channel and aggregate bitrate ceilings (often expressed in Mbps incoming/outgoing). A safe rule: target an NVR with at least 50% headroom on bitrate, and channel count one step above current need.
Storage architecture matters as much as raw capacity. Surveillance-grade drives (WD Purple, Seagate SkyHawk) are tuned for 24/7 write loads and a small concurrent read count; desktop drives fail in months under the same workload. RAID levels affect both fault tolerance and write performance — RAID 5 for general retention with one drive of redundancy, RAID 6 or 10 for larger arrays where two-drive failure isn't recoverable in RAID 5.
VMS choice locks you into a vendor ecosystem more than any camera decision will. Genetec, Milestone, Hanwha Wisenet WAVE, Avigilon, and Axis Camera Station differ on per-camera licensing cost, third-party integrations (access control, video analytics, identity), and analyst workflow. Demo the operator interface with the people who will actually use it before committing — analyst frustration drives more replacements than technical limits.
Plan for off-site or redundant storage. Single-site recorders fail or get stolen. Cloud-archive licensing, NAS replication, and multi-site federation become important the moment a chain customer asks for centralized investigation tools. Recorders that bury cloud-archive in a per-camera SaaS bundle drive long-term costs much higher than a one-time NAS expansion.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 8MP, Thermal |
| Connectivity | Wired, Cellular |
| Power | AC/DC, PoE++ |
| Channels | 4 |
| Storage | SSD, microSD, HDD |
| Type | NVR, Controller |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
How many drives can fit in a typical NVR?
Compact desktop NVRs hold 1-2 drives — typically capping around 16TB usable. Mid-size rack-mount NVRs hold 4-8 drives, often 32-64TB usable in RAID 5/6. Enterprise NVRs and dedicated storage servers scale to 16+ drives with hot-swap and JBOD expansion. Match drive count to your retention math; running out of drive bays mid-project means a recorder replacement, not just a drive add.
Should I use surveillance-grade or enterprise drives?
Surveillance-grade drives (WD Purple, Seagate SkyHawk) are correct for most NVRs — they're tuned for many concurrent write streams from cameras with low read count. Enterprise drives (WD Gold, Seagate IronWolf Pro, Exos) are appropriate for high-channel-count systems with many concurrent investigator clients reading recorded video. Avoid desktop drives entirely; they're rated for 8x5 light duty and fail quickly in 24/7 NVR loads.
What's the difference between an NVR and a hybrid recorder?
An NVR records exclusively from IP cameras over Ethernet. A hybrid (or tribrid) recorder accepts both IP cameras and legacy analog/HD-over-coax cameras on dedicated BNC inputs, useful for migrations where you can't replace coax runs immediately. Hybrid units cost more per channel and add complexity; if you're starting fresh or fully replacing analog, a pure NVR is simpler and almost always cheaper per usable channel.
Can I expand storage on an existing NVR?
Most rack NVRs and storage servers accept storage expansion via empty drive bays, eSATA/SAS JBOD shelves, or iSCSI targets. Desktop NVRs with only 1-2 bays generally do not. Before buying, check the recorder's supported expansion architecture and the maximum raw and usable capacity — many sub-$2,000 NVRs cap below the 24TB threshold most projects need within three years.
Do I need a dedicated VMS workstation?
For a few cameras and one or two simultaneous operators, the NVR's built-in client interface is enough. For 32+ cameras, multiple investigator seats, video walls, or wall-of-monitors operations, a dedicated workstation (or thin client) running the VMS client is standard. The workstation needs adequate GPU decode capacity for the simultaneous stream count — H.265 decode acceleration is essential at scale.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.