I'm in an unfortunate situation where a neighbor supposedly had their car keyed the day after I complained to them about ongoing noise problems coming from their apartment in the early morning hours, so naturally they're telling neighbors and police that I must have been the one to damage their car. Since I have cameras pointing at my front door and my cars which happen to be parked next to his, I am lucky enough to be able to prove I had no involvement. After looking through the motion triggers and the full 24 X 7 recordings from the day the incident supposedly took place, I don't even think the car was damaged in our parking lot as I never once saw anyone near the car. I don't even think it was damaged recently either since the scratches look old and covered with dirt..
But in any event, I want to provide the police with every single second of video from my cameras from 4/1 until today and let them sort through it. Maybe there's something I missed, but in any event it at least proves I was never near his car. I'm copying 350GB worth of videos to a USB drive to give to police, but they won't have any way of viewing them since they're in BVR format. Aside from telling them to go install Blue Iris, is there a stand alone player they can use to view the BVR files? I tried VLC but it won't play them.
If the only answer is for them to install Blue Iris (which I doubt they'll want to do), will it allow them to build indexes so they can navigate the files easier since I'm only supplying the .BVR files and that's it?
Thanks in advance.. I'm so glad I got these cameras and Blue Iris.. it's the second time this year they're saving me.
-Keith
But in any event, I want to provide the police with every single second of video from my cameras from 4/1 until today and let them sort through it. Maybe there's something I missed, but in any event it at least proves I was never near his car. I'm copying 350GB worth of videos to a USB drive to give to police, but they won't have any way of viewing them since they're in BVR format. Aside from telling them to go install Blue Iris, is there a stand alone player they can use to view the BVR files? I tried VLC but it won't play them.
If the only answer is for them to install Blue Iris (which I doubt they'll want to do), will it allow them to build indexes so they can navigate the files easier since I'm only supplying the .BVR files and that's it?
Thanks in advance.. I'm so glad I got these cameras and Blue Iris.. it's the second time this year they're saving me.
-Keith