> Trendnet has some. You'd need to get the java plugin working to view > them in a linux browser - not sure about full-time recording software. > If you don't have enough to justify a POE switch, you can get individual > power bricks that plug into the line to add power at a convenient place. >
Les, thanks for the pointer to Trendnet. They've got a *large* selection.
I'm finding that there's a variety of video formats output by these various devices... which is a consideration for us non-Windows folks. I haven't come down to a decision on which yet. Of course it's going to depend upon which are supported by Linux. For some reason, on my
system flashplayer is unreliable... sometimes it works, sometimes not. MPEG4 though works fine in Firefox. Due to past experience (many bad ones), I'm leery of Java-based software, so I'd be shy about using that plug-in. Hopefully there'd be other alternatives... anyone know about some?
Les, you bring up a good question about full-time recording. I don't know at all how that might work on Linux. Someone earlier mentioned ftp'ing the video files. If that's all it takes, then great. Some of the IP cameras have an ftp client, but I haven't seen one yet with an ftp *server* on it, so how it's possible to fetch and save the video files is still a mystery to me. Anyone with experience doing this with Linux?
Thanks to everyone for the comments and tips, the previous and future ones.
Best, ken
Hello, We have had success ACTi cameras
http://www.acti.com/home/index.asp and use ZoneMinder as a DVR and a console for viewing cameras http://www.zoneminder.com/ We have also used Axis cameras but the ACTi cameras are less expensive and better fit the schools budget.
Brett
|
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos