Has anyone been able to configure a native plugin to connect to AWS or Azure storage to upload just the clips when motion is detected? I saw a number of FTP bridge options, but was wondering how extensible it would be for a direct connection.
Its a "strategy" for suckers who fall for the companies pushing it. They push it because its the only way to guarantee RMR. Its actually a very silly concept. Put SD cards in your cameras. If you are further paranoid hide a nas or cheap NVR as recommended. You can take this paranoia all the way - what happens if someone cuts your cable line? lte backup?Common man, you can't refute offsite storage/backups as part of an overall strategy.
Its a "strategy" for suckers who fall for the companies pushing it.
I fully understand, but it doesn't cover as many scenarios as an offsite backup. For example, if someone were to set my house on fire, there's a good chance the MicroSDs won't be recoverable. Given the layout of my to-be home, there also isn't a great place to hide the BI server that is also well ventilated.Most modern IP cameras come with MicroSD input where people use MicroSD cards to backup.
I like this idea, is there any option for BI to send clips instead of snapshots to a folder (that I can sync with OneDrive either directly or with folder redirection)?I have BI configured to send a snapshot of the motion (on interior cameras that enable when my wife and I both leave the house) to OneDrive
It's not about saving a few dollars, quite honestly there's not a great solution or high demand for it. Your best bet is to use the FTP backup mentioned here - Blue Iris Cloud and Local Backup Plans - Best PracticesI'm a little confused, from one angle most things on this site prepare you for the worst outcomes with strong recommendations for multiple cameras covering all possible entry ways, detailed specs on how to configure cameras, recommendations for dedicated hardware to run BI, and everything else that I am thoroughly impressed with and see how much there is to learn.
In other cases like this thread it seems like saving a few dollars outweighs everything else. Offsite backups are ingrained in every single IT DR Strategy, with the resilience and budget determined by RPO and RTO. Given this is a home system in a middle class neighborhood, I don't see the need to store 100% of everything in an offsite location. That being said, if there is activity detected, it's not a bad idea to keep a copy offsite. Comparing a co-lo to the cloud, the cloud is much cheaper for periodic storage as opposed to dedicated hardware.
I fully understand, but it doesn't cover as many scenarios as an offsite backup. For example, if someone were to set my house on fire, there's a good chance the MicroSDs won't be recoverable. Given the layout of my to-be home, there also isn't a great place to hide the BI server that is also well ventilated.
I like this idea, is there any option for BI to send clips instead of snapshots to a folder (that I can sync with OneDrive either directly or with folder redirection)?
There is a huge difference between having camera coverage so you actually capture what occurs and utilizing useless backup strategies.I'm a little confused, from one angle most things on this site prepare you for the worst outcomes with strong recommendations for multiple cameras covering all possible entry ways, detailed specs on how to configure cameras, recommendations for dedicated hardware to run BI, and everything else that I am thoroughly impressed with and see how much there is to learn.
In other cases like this thread it seems like saving a few dollars outweighs everything else. Offsite backups are ingrained in every single IT DR Strategy, with the resilience and budget determined by RPO and RTO. Given this is a home system in a middle class neighborhood, I don't see the need to store 100% of everything in an offsite location. That being said, if there is activity detected, it's not a bad idea to keep a copy offsite. Comparing a co-lo to the cloud, the cloud is much cheaper for periodic storage as opposed to dedicated hardware.
I fully understand, but it doesn't cover as many scenarios as an offsite backup. For example, if someone were to set my house on fire, there's a good chance the MicroSDs won't be recoverable. Given the layout of my to-be home, there also isn't a great place to hide the BI server that is also well ventilated.
I like this idea, is there any option for BI to send clips instead of snapshots to a folder (that I can sync with OneDrive either directly or with folder redirection)?