Did some searching but still not clear as to the difference of the subject cameras. I read that the 5 series is Eco-Savvy vs. Lite but I have no idea what that means. $50 more but what am I missing?
What about night vision with motion?
thanks for the hint... been searching... maybe post the links if you want to be a little more help.hint: reviews of both models have been written by members, I do recommend checking those reviews out.
thanks for the hint... been searching... maybe post the links if you want to be a little more help.
Thank you, BP. I went ahead and ordered the 5231. Not planning on using the mic but I am installing at the front entrance door so the future option is nice.They are basically identical except:
* 2231 doesn't have audio. 5231 has a built-in mic.
* 2231 maxes out at 30 FPS. 5231 maxes out at 60 FPS, which matters to maybe 1 in 1000 users.
* 5231 can do higher-resolution sub streams, I believe.
* 5231 supposedly has better built-in motion detection features, but I never use these so I'm not 100% certain.
Basically if you run Blue Iris then the only thing you should be concerned with is the lack of a microphone.
They are basically identical except:
* 2231 doesn't have audio. 5231 has a built-in mic.
* 2231 maxes out at 30 FPS. 5231 maxes out at 60 FPS, which matters to maybe 1 in 1000 users.
* 5231 can do higher-resolution sub streams, I believe.
* 5231 supposedly has better built-in motion detection features, but I never use these so I'm not 100% certain.
Basically if you run Blue Iris then the only thing you should be concerned with is the lack of a microphone.
Even then, BI is just using one stream from your camera. Most people only use one stream, IMO. But there are folks out there with multiple NVRs and/or home automation systems that can each try to pull their own stream direct from the camera. That’s when multiple main streams can be important.If I view it on my cell phone and tablet with the BI app (or UA3 web view) would that be using 3 streams"?
Maybe a dumb question but why would I need multiple streams\sub streams?
I use BI. If I had the video on screen on my computer through BI I assume that is using the main stream, right?
If I view it on my cell phone and tablet with the BI app (or UA3 web view) would that be using 3 streams"?
Hi @nbstl68
This also applies to mobile devices - many of which have significantly less power to decode H.264/265 streams and often have low resolution screens.
If you're using the BI mobile app, I don't think you can point directly at a camera... it's always streaming directly from BI. The mobile app Settings are does let you set "Encoder profiles" for LAN/WAN, so you could set one profile up so that it uses less bandwidth when it connects over WAN. If you're using UI3, if you hove your mouse near the bottom right, there's a gear icon you can use to control the stream size.Good information all, thanks!
So, if I have additional streams from the camera, it sounds like I would want to typically point my mobile devices\tablets to a smaller 2nd\sub stream and they may perform better not having to stream a larger image or video stream than needed, yes?
just to make it more clear for myself (still a noob in this field), if i use a nvr to record the mainstream that is one stream. If i use other devices like a mobile or another device to watch the mainstream, does that count towards a multiple stream or still the 1st main stream? I suppose you can watch the main stream on as many devices as you want, without the camera having to do anything extra right? as explained in the quote below, as long as you don't need another resolution, another sub stream is not important.Even then, BI is just using one stream from your camera. Most people only use one stream, IMO. But there are folks out there with multiple NVRs and/or home automation systems that can each try to pull their own stream direct from the camera. That’s when multiple main streams can be important.
does it really matter how many cams you want to display on your screen for the resolution? my nvr is 4k rated, so my example is rubbish i know, and it is easy showing 4 1080p cams on a 1080p screen. In my view, it should only matter that the cable connecting the device to the monitor that it can transfer all the data? But if it is as you said, then even if it is 8 1080p streams, depending on the nvr/device it can have difficulties showing all the streams at once right?Hi @nbstl68
Let's assume your camera is producing only one stream - a 8MP stream at 15 fps and H.265
Now let's say you have 8 cameras, each 8MP producing that stream.
Now let's say you have a device that wants to display all 8 8MP streams on a 1080P monitor... that's now basically 8x 1/2x "4K'" H.265 that devices needs to decode AND RESIZE for the 1080P display.
If you attempt to decode all 8 streams on some devices, when they run out of CPU power to decode - you will see a "decode" error on that channel.
This is why having a camera ALSO produce a lower resolution stream which can be consumed by a device is useful. Now your displaying device can consume the 8x lower resolution H.265 and display them ( hopefully ).
This also applies to mobile devices - many of which have significantly less power to decode H.264/265 streams and often have low resolution screens.
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does it really matter how many cams you want to display on your screen for the resolution?..