Your best bet would be to run a power only (red/black) wire to the camera and PIR. The consumption would probably be too much even for a high capacity splitter.
I got them from Andy. I got the mics from Amazon. I don't use POE on these. I ran a separate wire to power the mic and camera. The mic came with a splitter, so I only had to run 1 power cable. I don't use Blue Iris.
What I did was use pull string. I tied loops in the string and then tied one end to the clip on the camera and took the other end up the ladder with me. Then I pulled it up loop by loop then clipped the clip to the mount and undid the string. It worked out pretty good.
Negative. I'm going to keep an eye on OpenALPR to see if her plates show up again. The only time they show up now is when she drove by 3 times during the video.
She doesn't even live close to here. She lives about 20 miles away on the other side of town. There's no reason for her to be on the same street that I can think of.
Last night I noticed some garbage in the middle of our street in front of the house. I went through my footage to find out if it was a neighbor. It ended up being my father in law's ex possibly stalking the place. It's a little long - sorry.
Here's how my 192.168.x.x range is set up:
Right click the network icon in the task bar
Open Network and Internet settings
Choose Wi Fi or Ethernet depending on how you connect
Change adapter settings
Right Click Wifi or Ethernet
Properties
Click Internet Protocol Version 4 then click...
If you have both cameras plugged in, and you have not changed their IP addresses, you're going to have an IP conflict. You should only do one camera at a time.
What OS are you using? Do you know how to tell what IP your computer has?
What is there to fix? The camera isn't designed to be an LPR camera. For the price, it does do a reasonably good job at it. Any auto focus camera is going to have issues trying to focus in low to no light situations. Don't make Andy pay for your mistake because you didn't buy an official LPR...
Easiest way is to plug a laptop or desktop into the back of the NVR. It will provide the computer an IP that will allow you to access the settings as long as you have DHCP enabled.
IIRC, there was someone earlier in this thread that had a problem with water intrusion. You might want to crack it open to see if there's any water damage.