Hi Fenderman,
Re plug and play, I will tell you about my Hikvision experience. I plugged the cameras into the NVR, turned the NVR on, it found all the cameras and was recording automatically. It would seem that my experience is at odds with your, assuming of course that you have actually set up HikVision cameras with one of their POE NVRs.
I have nothing against Windows. Ah, well, okay, I lie, there are a lot of things I don't like about Windows. But I can live with them. Windows has a lot of great features of course. So I don't want to get into an argument about this other than to offer my personal opinion that Linux is a better 24x7 embedded solution, having been designed for it. Having a server based system Windows based is not a deal killer for me, it is just questionable why a dedicated system vendor would choose that platform for this purpose. One reason might be because it was easier for the particular programmer. As someone who spent 15 years developing Windows software before doing multi-platform server development, I can see both sides.
I think in this comparison, there is one thing that has been overlooked and I alluded to it in my earlier email and that is cost and complexity:
With an NVR, you just plug the camera cables in. NVRs are compact, pretty quiet and SCW's 8 channel model cost $400. The cameras, at least on HikVision, by default, operate on a different subnet to the network interface going to the network. So if you don't have a VPN set up, (and most home users do not), then the cameras are not directly exposed to the Internet, even if you port forward the NVR (which many home users do). Irrespective of the value of having a VPN and not port forwarding, there is some protection from hacking into the cameras.
With Blue Iris, yes, it may only be $50, but you still have to buy a computer and a powered switch. If you get all that for under $350, okay, you're still ahead, but I think it would be splitting hairs. I looked at the economical PC recommendations for Blue Iris and they are large, older desktop computers. I actually don't have the cupboard space for that in one location. It was hard enough to fit the Dahua NVR in. I wish they would design a compact, single drive 8 channel NVR with the drive over the motherboard.
Anyway, I could go on, but I will summarize by saying I am not dead set against one or the other. I just want to learn a bit more about each for my technical requirements, which aren't that many.
Oh, and on that note, one last question: How do you handle input alarms with Blue Iris? I have an infraRED beam device that sends a signal to a receiver and on the NVRs there are input and output alarm connections on the back. What do you do with a PC based system?
Re plug and play, I will tell you about my Hikvision experience. I plugged the cameras into the NVR, turned the NVR on, it found all the cameras and was recording automatically. It would seem that my experience is at odds with your, assuming of course that you have actually set up HikVision cameras with one of their POE NVRs.
I don't know anything about the capabilties of Uniview/SCW cameras, which is why I originally posted this thread. So I am interested in a bit more detail on this Matt's reply if he is still reading. I will add that I generally use the same or similar cameras.You cannot mix and match cameras and also retain all advanced IVS features which is very limiting with uniview/scw cameras as they dont have many design and sensor configurations.
The risk is that if you update the firmware on some Chinese, grey market cameras, that the language configuration goes to Chinese and it is tricky to get it back. Lots of posts on this forum about those experiences. I upgraded my Chinese sourced firmware on my Dahua NVR and Cameras after having some problems with the software. Now the cameras won't do anything with line crossing or intrusion detection and the NVR won't attach a picture under any circumstances to an email anymore. So I disagree with your assertion based upon my own experiences.There is no risk when buying via china
That's interesting. Are SCW NVR's Uniview as well as their cameras?SCW's own software runs on windows!!!!!!
I have nothing against Windows. Ah, well, okay, I lie, there are a lot of things I don't like about Windows. But I can live with them. Windows has a lot of great features of course. So I don't want to get into an argument about this other than to offer my personal opinion that Linux is a better 24x7 embedded solution, having been designed for it. Having a server based system Windows based is not a deal killer for me, it is just questionable why a dedicated system vendor would choose that platform for this purpose. One reason might be because it was easier for the particular programmer. As someone who spent 15 years developing Windows software before doing multi-platform server development, I can see both sides.
The same problem you will have if you have an 8 port PEO switch with a 9th camera. The original choice for either should have been 16.What is the availability of an 8ch nvr when you need the ninth camera?
I think in this comparison, there is one thing that has been overlooked and I alluded to it in my earlier email and that is cost and complexity:
With an NVR, you just plug the camera cables in. NVRs are compact, pretty quiet and SCW's 8 channel model cost $400. The cameras, at least on HikVision, by default, operate on a different subnet to the network interface going to the network. So if you don't have a VPN set up, (and most home users do not), then the cameras are not directly exposed to the Internet, even if you port forward the NVR (which many home users do). Irrespective of the value of having a VPN and not port forwarding, there is some protection from hacking into the cameras.
With Blue Iris, yes, it may only be $50, but you still have to buy a computer and a powered switch. If you get all that for under $350, okay, you're still ahead, but I think it would be splitting hairs. I looked at the economical PC recommendations for Blue Iris and they are large, older desktop computers. I actually don't have the cupboard space for that in one location. It was hard enough to fit the Dahua NVR in. I wish they would design a compact, single drive 8 channel NVR with the drive over the motherboard.
Anyway, I could go on, but I will summarize by saying I am not dead set against one or the other. I just want to learn a bit more about each for my technical requirements, which aren't that many.
Oh, and on that note, one last question: How do you handle input alarms with Blue Iris? I have an infraRED beam device that sends a signal to a receiver and on the NVRs there are input and output alarm connections on the back. What do you do with a PC based system?