Difference between revisions of "Surveillance Cameras"

From LinuxMCE
Jump to: navigation, search
(Imported document)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
<table width="100%"> <tr><td bgcolor="#FFCFCF">This page was written by Pluto and imported with their permission when LinuxMCE branched off in February, 2007.  In general any information should apply to LinuxMCE.  However, this page should be edited to reflect changes to LinuxMCE and remove old references to Pluto.</td></tr> </table><p>The best surveillance cameras are the IP based models, such as those by Panasonic.  These cameras are plug and play--just them into any network jack.  They do not require configuring.  Plus, many of these cameras support pan/tilt and zoom so you can control them through the Orbiter.</p>
+
<p>The best surveillance cameras are the IP based models, such as those by Panasonic.  These cameras are plug and play--just them into any network jack.  They do not require configuring.  Plus, many of these cameras support pan/tilt and zoom so you can control them through the Orbiter.</p>
 
<p>If you have the regular analog cameras you will need to add a video capture board to your Core, and then attach the cameras to it.  In that case, add the video capture board on the 'interface' page, and then add all the surveillance cmameras on this page, specifying that they are 'controlled by' the video capture board.</p>
 
<p>If you have the regular analog cameras you will need to add a video capture board to your Core, and then attach the cameras to it.  In that case, add the video capture board on the 'interface' page, and then add all the surveillance cmameras on this page, specifying that they are 'controlled by' the video capture board.</p>
<p>There are also several settings for each camera.  For save video, you can choose "All the time", meaning Pluto will constantly record the video from the camera and save it on the Core.  This can take up quite a bit of hard disk space, though.  Normally you would choose "Only when motion is detected".  This way Pluto will only save the video when it detects there is movement, or something is changing.  If you choose "Don't capture", then you will still be able to view the cameras live, but Pluto will not keep an archive.</p>
+
<p>There are also several settings for each camera.  For save video, you can choose "All the time", meaning LinuxMCE will constantly record the video from the camera and save it on the Core.  This can take up quite a bit of hard disk space, though.  Normally you would choose "Only when motion is detected".  This way LinuxMCE will only save the video when it detects there is movement, or something is changing.  If you choose "Don't capture", then you will still be able to view the cameras live, but LinuxMCE will not keep an archive.</p>
<p>If you do want an archive, be sure to indicate how many days you want Pluto to keep the archive.  The default is 10, meaning Pluto will erase any video archive that is more than 10 days old to free up space on the Core.  If you are running out of disk space on the Core you can reduce this number so there is not so much space taken up with video archives.</p>
+
<p>If you do want an archive, be sure to indicate how many days you want LinuxMCE to keep the archive.  The default is 10, meaning LinuxMCE will erase any video archive that is more than 10 days old to free up space on the Core.  If you are running out of disk space on the Core you can reduce this number so there is not so much space taken up with video archives.</p>
 
+

Revision as of 10:32, 19 March 2007

The best surveillance cameras are the IP based models, such as those by Panasonic. These cameras are plug and play--just them into any network jack. They do not require configuring. Plus, many of these cameras support pan/tilt and zoom so you can control them through the Orbiter.

If you have the regular analog cameras you will need to add a video capture board to your Core, and then attach the cameras to it. In that case, add the video capture board on the 'interface' page, and then add all the surveillance cmameras on this page, specifying that they are 'controlled by' the video capture board.

There are also several settings for each camera. For save video, you can choose "All the time", meaning LinuxMCE will constantly record the video from the camera and save it on the Core. This can take up quite a bit of hard disk space, though. Normally you would choose "Only when motion is detected". This way LinuxMCE will only save the video when it detects there is movement, or something is changing. If you choose "Don't capture", then you will still be able to view the cameras live, but LinuxMCE will not keep an archive.

If you do want an archive, be sure to indicate how many days you want LinuxMCE to keep the archive. The default is 10, meaning LinuxMCE will erase any video archive that is more than 10 days old to free up space on the Core. If you are running out of disk space on the Core you can reduce this number so there is not so much space taken up with video archives.