![]() ![]() Although some problems get worse the more I add. PROBABLY is my cameras or data source (I tried both the cameras direct AND my Synology reflector). A couple of them (4 total, all different brands) periodically blink the screen black, or with a "ripped" green frame that sticks around for half a second. The videos sometimes go through a weird buffering "dance" where the video pauses constantly. Although even on desktop it's slow and things are glitchy. Yeah, it's unusably slow on my tablets (I'll replace them with something faster eventually). Ninja edit: Any setup advice or just the quirks you mentioned?Įdit2: Set mine up. Personally I think my dashboard tablets (great screens, crappy CPUs) are probably too slow for this to work properly. Good to hear it's working pretty well for you, even with it being very new. I saw this pop up in HACS the other day and bookmarked it but hadn't had a chance to try it yet. I have an absurd number of entities, which I'm in the process of pairing down (~3000) so I'm occasionally getting errors that I have too many files open, which might be another reason I can only add 3. This could be a limitation of my own setup, although I have HA running on a fairly powerful dedicated Mac mini. Any more, and one of the camera feeds won't load. Also, I'm only able to add three cameras with this method. But that probably isn't due to the integration itself. When opening the iPhone Home Assistant app, the live feed is displayed within 2 seconds.ĮDIT: Also, it's nice because you can mute or unmute cameras that have audio, although it's fairly choppy for me. Currently I have my iPhone motion notifications from my front door set to open my iPhone security camera software, but now I can just open HA and see the live feed without a delay. But it's great having a live camera feed right in HA that isn't delayed by ~10 seconds or whatever it is. So I still have camera entities with the feeds from those cameras for live iOS notifications. VMEyeSuper allows iPhone users to view and control live video streams from cameras and video encoders.It doesn't create camera entities, it just shows a video feed. Pro version support more convenient settings & functions.ĭirect stream connection. In GeoVision Multicam software, click on Configure button, select Video Analysis, then Object Index/Monitor Setting. The following is the setup procedure for an IP camera in the system. Start with an IP cam / NAS Package To help you get started, GeoVision offers a complete integrated IP cam/NAS solution, of which includes everything you need to start a surveillance system solution. No video going through 3rd party servers. Select the camera (s) which Face Detection is to be applied, then select Configure. ![]() Under Object Index tab, enable Face Detection by placing a check by Camera. Then, select the camera number from the drop-down list. Click on the Configure button and select System Configure. On the main screen, click the Configure button, select System Configure and click IP Camera Install. Under the General Settings tab and the Startup box, make sure that WebCam Server is checked as seen below. This ensures that the webcam server automatically restarts if Geovision restarts. To add an IP camera from a list of the IP cameras on the LAN, click Scan Camera. To manually set up an IP camera, follow steps 2 to 7. You will get: The package includes everything you need to experience NAS as storage option for IP video surveillance. Snapshot capability (while viewing live stream) to save to your local photo gallery.Ībility to change ip address and port as desired for internal and remote users. Support history view to switch different camera IP convenient. Support DVRs or IPCameras of different manufactures. ![]()
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