After my PVR's proprietary power supply died recently, I threw together a PC based PVR to get me by with old PC parts. It's running eight analog Bosh cameras that are five years old.
As most of us can attest, a high performing security system is a must these days, even up here in friendly Canada We've had three break and entries in three months (way higher then usual). I've added more lot lighting, replaced damaged exterior doors with higher gage steel, repaired forced un-alarmed vacuum doors and added nightly random patrol car visits. And still they come.
On rain days I'm trying to learn about digital ip cameras right now. I can almost justify the substantial cost increases, based on major performance gains and the ability to cover the whole site with less cameras (at least with the 1-5 mega pixel cameras).
One of my main concerns has to do with the mega-network bandwidth these cams eat up. Example: a 1.3 mega pixel ip camera (1280*1024) at 15 frames per sec, with high quality H.264 encoding eats up about 22 gigs a day, and thats ONE channel!
I really don't want my existing high speed credit card network to compete for network bandwidth with bandwidth hungry mega pixel ip cams.
If I were to take the plunge, I was thinking of creating a separate gigabyte Ethernet local area network, with the ip cams and NVR (network video recorder) totally apart from my Hamilton DAN computer and its associated auto tellers and in-bay cc acceptors. But then that prevents remote access and smart phone access into the network -I'm guessing.
My head is starting to hurt...sorry for the long post.
Anyone take the plunge yet?
BigLeo might have some valuable input based on his extensive network engineering background.
Thanks
As most of us can attest, a high performing security system is a must these days, even up here in friendly Canada We've had three break and entries in three months (way higher then usual). I've added more lot lighting, replaced damaged exterior doors with higher gage steel, repaired forced un-alarmed vacuum doors and added nightly random patrol car visits. And still they come.
On rain days I'm trying to learn about digital ip cameras right now. I can almost justify the substantial cost increases, based on major performance gains and the ability to cover the whole site with less cameras (at least with the 1-5 mega pixel cameras).
One of my main concerns has to do with the mega-network bandwidth these cams eat up. Example: a 1.3 mega pixel ip camera (1280*1024) at 15 frames per sec, with high quality H.264 encoding eats up about 22 gigs a day, and thats ONE channel!
I really don't want my existing high speed credit card network to compete for network bandwidth with bandwidth hungry mega pixel ip cams.
If I were to take the plunge, I was thinking of creating a separate gigabyte Ethernet local area network, with the ip cams and NVR (network video recorder) totally apart from my Hamilton DAN computer and its associated auto tellers and in-bay cc acceptors. But then that prevents remote access and smart phone access into the network -I'm guessing.
My head is starting to hurt...sorry for the long post.
Anyone take the plunge yet?
BigLeo might have some valuable input based on his extensive network engineering background.
Thanks