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Securityspy server
Securityspy server







  1. #Securityspy server how to
  2. #Securityspy server manual
  3. #Securityspy server tv
  4. #Securityspy server mac
  5. #Securityspy server windows

In addition, each camera can be displayed in its own individual video window.

#Securityspy server windows

You can also create Group windows that contain particular groups of cameras - useful in larger installations to organise cameras into logical collections. SecuritySpy's main All Cameras window shows live video streams from all configured cameras in a grid view. Setup instructions for IP video devices can be found in the SecuritySpy Installation Manual.

securityspy server

If you are using IP cameras, you can add them via Preferences - Cameras. Initially, SecuritySpy will detect and display all local (USB, Thunderbolt and built-in) devices connected to your Mac.

  • Synchronised multi-camera playback of captured footage.
  • Pre-capture option, to capture video before the time of motion.
  • Motion-triggered email and iOS notifications.
  • FTP upload feature for automatic off-site backup of captured footage.
  • securityspy server

  • Pan/Tilt/Zoom (PTZ) support for network cameras.
  • Hardware-accelerated H.264 and H.265 compression for efficient storage of captured footage.
  • Built-in secure web server for remote viewing and administration.
  • Sophisticated AI-based motion and object detection using neural networks.
  • Separate Continuous and Motion Detection capture modes, for flexible recording.
  • Supports virtually all IP cameras (ONVIF, Axis, Vivotek, Canon, Dahua, Hikvision etc.).
  • Displays and captures video from multiple cameras simultaneously.
  • #Securityspy server how to

    For information about how to choose, set up and install the hardware of your CCTV system, see the SecuritySpy Installation Manual.

    #Securityspy server manual

    This manual describes how to use the SecuritySpy software itself. SecuritySpy's flexibility will allow you to set up a system that is tailored for your individual needs, whether you want a single camera or a hundred. If you have an existing system using analog cameras, SecuritySpy can use these alongside more modern IP cameras, allowing you to transition to a state-of-the-art digital system. If you are building a video surveillance system from scratch, all you need is SecuritySpy, a Mac, and some IP cameras.

    #Securityspy server mac

    And, as Mac software, it is as elegant and easy to use as you would expect, with a carefully-designed user interface. It it also ideal for autonomous remote operation, as it has a fully-featured secure web interface that allows you to access and control your surveillance system from over your local network or over the Internet. SecuritySpy can turn any Mac into a video surveillance station (for example, with multiple large screens in a security control room). With features such as AI-powered smart motion detection, email and iPhone alerts, ONVIF support and Pan/Tilt/Zoom control, SecuritySpy will enable you to set up a comprehensive and effective CCTV system for your business or home quickly and easily. SecuritySpy is CCTV video surveillance software for the Mac.

  • Setting up SecuritySpy for Autonomous Operation.
  • #Securityspy server tv

  • Remote Access from your iPhone, iPad or Apple TV.
  • * - among other things, we operate DNSSEC key servers for various roots, and we do key ceremonies on a regular basis.

    securityspy server

    I don't know how motion JPEG streams are handled.ĭoes anyone have any experience on insight on this? But I'm less certain if they will work as a content distributor/duplicator to distribute a single stream from SecuritySpy and multiply it to the number of hosts asking for it on the proxy. I know that Squid, Apache, and others can serve this purpose for simply acting as the firewall. It seems that this would be a previously solved problem where a reverse proxy (or MJPEG re-broadcaster) could perform both as an application-layer firewall and also as a content duplicator. The reasons for this are at least two: 1) we don't like having the "public internet" touching our internal systems in any circumstance, and 2) in the event of a flash crowd we would like to have the work of duplicating a data stream done on sacrificial hardware and not on the system performing archiving. We would strongly prefer to keep the public internet off of the SS machine doing the archiving, and to use a reverse proxy (or content distributor) do the duplication and public interface for video streams. We're trying to keep just one SecuritySpy system in house*, but it will have two possibly contradictory purposes: 1) recording a high-security stream of data looking at a vault, and 2) broadcasting a view of this data to one or dozens of people on the public internet.









    Securityspy server