64 live streams) 32 BIT OS: 24 Items (e.g.
Virtual camera - users can now import offline video files (wearable cameras, action cams, drones, etc.), into archive and associate with a virtual camera, which can be used like other cameras in a system. DW Spectrum IPVMS client combines performance, ease-of-use, and a 360 let the user decide how best to use the software's approach into a single cross-platform lightweight app capable of running any server.Failover on storage failure - failover now also occurs when all designated storage drives fail on a server.nov exported files can be protected by a password. Layout-as-an-action - a predefined layout can be opened when an.DW Spectrum® IPVMS now includes DW® Cloud to easily manage all your systems and users from a simple. While at the same time introducing a new framework to integrate dozens of 3rd party devices. DW Spectrum® IPVMS is an elegantly easy cutting-edge approach to video surveillance, addressing the primary limitations of managing enterprise-level HD video while offering the lowest total cost of deployment and ownership on the market. I won’t lie I’m incredibly lazy and just good enough to make it work, but it might not be the best.It includes a whole new SDK for rapid integration of 3rd party devices designed for AI and deep-learning driven computer vision applications. I’ve always thought about working on the integration and part of me was hoping they would do it to increase sales. So, when I’m not on the best network (or in my case upload speed sucks at home) it can give you good general video replay and if you need quality to look at something in particular you can. Oh, I also like that the mobile app has the ability to choose speed vs quality. Good tech support and software all around. I can shoot through video like no business and they release major updates included in your license. The other website based ones (at least open source ones) I’ve found to be clunky and slow. I’ve had another app that did a 10000% better job at detection, but they didn’t do remote viewing and needed a windows computer always running.
They provide a good server on linux and then I can use my other machines Android Mobile App (though weirdly not a tablet or android TV?!?) and a Windows 10 desktop for evaluation. I’ve found NX Witness (Though for me it’s Digital Watchdog as the reseller in the U.S.) to be the best solution for a server/remote experience. Granted i’m about 3 days into my 30 day trial, but i’m cautiously optimistic.
I’m still figuring out some more details from DW right now (how licenses work, api’s available, etc), but for the most part this looks like a really robust ideal software to run on a linux system with tons of support behind it.
Looking at those links, seems like the per-camera license is ~$65-$80 depending on the day.
You will need to install DW Spectrum prior to activating the licenses that you purchase.
Please note that DW Spectrum licenses do NOT work with Nx Witness. You can get pricing and purchase licenses from the following online resellers: Our partner Digital Watchdog sells and supports Network Optix’ IPVMS platform under the brand name DW Spectrum. The NX Witness support was pretty quick in getting back to me with this response: Just in case anyone else finds this topic - I’ve also tried zoneminder, motioneye, shinobi, kerberos, blueiris (docker + wine ) and tried out NX Witness after finding this thread.