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DKtucson

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Everything posted by DKtucson

  1. I think a lot of us have run into this: The run of the mill chinese dvrs will use phone apps like Asee or VMeye etc and only offer web based viewing on IE via Active X plugins. Newer browsers like IE11 and Linux/Mac don't like to play that game and some folks get real edgy when they get as popup saying do you want to install this plugin from Shanghei. As an alternative install VLC. Go the the Media command and Open Network Stream. Put the following in the address field "rtsp://192.168.XX.XX:your_rtsp_port/user=username&password=your_password&channel=1&stream=0.sdp?real_stream--rtp-caching=100" Obviously change address if your net is different or put in your dyndns/no-ip DDNS domain name. put in your rtsp port from the DVR settings. The username & password for dvr access and the channel number. If you go through and launch it each time you change the channel number it will create a "playlist" of your previously viewed cameras for easy switching.
  2. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    on another generic dvr from another vendor where there was no spelling out of a particular rtsp port I tried the 3 ports reserved for the dvr with every permutation of http--mms--rtsp as well as trying different syntax and it wouldn't launch--there must be very specific syntax in some dvrs or some just don't play well
  3. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    Not likely but you can try..most dvrs have a http port--mobile port--mobile monitor and rtsp but it all depends on the maker
  4. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    Samir---I get the rtsp port number from the network or netservices screen--depending on the menus
  5. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    Samir--I don't have any insight to particular brands or models but it does appear the functionality differs--your mileage may vary as they say on the car commercials. It worked well for me in a very generic $50 straight from china D1 dvr Guangzho Eagleyes maker--but trying it on a $1000 Dahua HD-SDI model it keeps looping me for a login/password even though I'm using an admin account credentials and it will not run
  6. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    The syntax looks correct..unless the functionality between DVRs differs slightly or versions/platforms of VLC
  7. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    is that an extra space between rtsp :// and not rtsp:// ?
  8. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    I do not get a secondary login/pasword prompt on my dvr access..putting it in the string just brings up the specified channel
  9. DKtucson

    Use VLC to view feeds from chinese DVRs

    correct--as an example [rtsp://192.168.1.10:554/user=admin&password=12345&channel=1&stream=0.sdp?real_stream--rtp-caching=100] --without the [ ] brackets replace the ip address with your applicable one or your DDNS host name replace the port 554 with your RTSP port from your dvr menu screens replace the admin with your username replace the 12345 with your password change the channel= number to the camera number you wish to view and yes it is all run together with the ampersands
  10. DKtucson

    DDNS services and potential hacks

    I see a big problem with the XSS exploit--google cars drove in my neighborhood 5 years ago..I've since moved (maybe) and my router was in AZ now in Calif but the bad guys rely on 5 year old google coordinants and jack the house I USED to live in (sorry new owners).--LOL
  11. Recently No-Ip.com had an outage caused by MS seizing their domains due to some users abuse (malware/bootleg software). I had a back & forth with a person on a Facebook thread that we are all basically idiots for using public or 3rd party DDNS services so clients can view their cameras. His stance was that someone could use a "man in the middle" attack and garner the login credentials & have camera access/ "case" their home using their cameras. Well..my counter was that if someone was away from home, using a hotspot that was spoofed and someone was nabbing info they would have no idea of where the house was located per se..just views of a front door/patio slider, inside of garage etc etc. Any IP geolocator will not show the actual home traced back from an IP address--you'd need a court order from the ISP for that. This twit was basically saying we're all rank amatuers & should be running our own DDNS servers. Aside from this spot outage, No-ip has been rock solid and I can get 30 domain names for 2 years for $15...thats .03 cents a month for redirect names I can give to my clients. Reality check..if someone is going to compromise a system it's more likely going to be a paintball gun from a distance then a crowbar session.
  12. DKtucson

    DDNS services and potential hacks

    Good points on the replies-- I checked in on the script XSS and inputting my mac address it came up blank so I'm good so far. Agreed on the "big target" point. As I was discussing with the guy on facebook that my local casino probably doesn't have accessible cameras from the outside world--truly "closed circuit" as they have a room full of guys manning joystick ptz controllers etc. I do a lot of my own webstuff..I host my own websites on a nix box..I maintain a FTP server so motion still from my clients are saved locally in case they get jacked--I run a terminal server for my sisters quickbooks. But I can't see going through the hassle of a dns server for the perceived piece of mind of avoiding a service provider
  13. aha.. the plot thickens..the friend has 2 systems--one at his home (vmeye china dvr) and a pc based unit at his office running TimHillOne... the home ISP is Simply Bits..the Office is Cox so the cinese DVR is not the culprit. The pc based unit uses dyndns.org addy and was used at the house until we upgraded that location to the hd-sdi system. The pc based dvr was never an issue with bandwith when in use at the house. Mixing of terminology--when the client emailed me initially he stated that the isp was saying he's way over his bandwith he asked if the fault could be with "the dvr"--I assumed the new chinese dvr as this is the "new kid on the block" and would be suspect of any new quirky behavior . Likely his wifi was hacked
  14. Hello, I recently setup a home DVR with HD-SDI cameras and a DVR from China. The DVR uses xmeye/VMeye cloud service for remote view either by IE web browser or smartphone app. Cox is the internet provider and they gave my client a tap on the shoulder that their monthly bandwith usage was 545GB (lordy). The are away from home, no house sitter or teenagers streaming movies etc. I have a full D1 dvr also of generic chinese make but uses dyndns.org addy for access--I also have a gob of stuff running (terminal server for quickbooks, ftp server , wife has netflix etc) and we use about 80gb a month. Correct me if I'm wrong, but unless someone is connecting to the cameras for viewing in either a browser or smartphone then it really shouldn't be gobbling up 1's & 0's
  15. Thanks everyone for the replies.. there is no cloud storage..just view. The Xmeye service is the DVR vendors own DDNS. It takes the serial number of the unit/ip address and makes it available for remote viewing in either IE or android/i-phone app VMeye Super. The house is currently vacant--the owner is a friend of mine here in Tucson, AZ and he avoids the summer heat by going to a vacation condo in San Diego for the summer. No one at the house-- no Roku TV running, no torrents seeding or other stuff. My question and answer from the vendor SECTEC in china: is it constantly consuming bandwith even though no computer or smartphone is requesting data? No ,it will not if without any request data ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Now, if someone was doing a browser view and asked to record locally--then it would be uploading data stream to the cloud and back down to that remote viewer of course. The dvr is set to record only on motion event If "cloud enable" is unchecked it's not accessible at all remotely I'll have my friend call cox internet & see if thats uploaded or downloaded data--good call. I called my ISP and they were of an opinion that no way would a dvr gobble up the much bandwith--likely someone has his wifi password and is streaming video /netflix etc
  16. I have an email in to them about 30 mins ago to check that..they took the wife's laptop and that had 2 bookmarks-- a "local view" at 192.168.XX.XX and a remote view at the xmeye website
  17. Thanks Shockwave...my thought is, even if they were viewing it all the time their wireless provider would have cut them off--they would be receiving 545gb on their phone/mobile plan--yikes!!
  18. Hello folks, I setup a Dahua DVR for hd-sdi cameras and have 3 HD's installed 2 1tb drives and a 2 TB drive (Total of 4tb). HD1 is a 1tb , HD2 is the 2nd 1 TB and HD3 is the 2 TB. I have them all in one HD "group"--just to make sure I'm correct in my thinking ALL drives should be set to "read/write" if I want to start recording on one drive--then when that drive fills it goes on to the next--fills that one up--then on to the 2 tb drive--fills that up and then starts to overwrite the 1st 1tb drive. Am I correct in that assumption? If a drive is set to "redundant" that means it's a raid mirror to make sure footage recorded on one is backed up on another. Am I correct in that assumption / understanding?
  19. Hello, here's the situation: PC based DVR running H264Webcam (TimHillOne).8 camera system 30fps each channel. What will occur is that lets say you are looking at a street scene. The recording will start with a person in the middle of the frame, rather than catch them from the point at which they entered...to the non picky observer--hey we caught the guy on frame. To the OCD customer, "where did he come from? from what direction did they enter the property? what else is the system missing?"--those are the nagging questions. Any ideas of what may be a setting I'm missing to cover these "jerky voids"?
  20. DKtucson

    odd recording -people out of nowhere

    @sunnykim--The card is an 8 chip card from china with generic WDM drivers--the software is from another vendor so my guess would be if hardware couldn't keep up the software would kick out an error and not oblige the hardware by dropping frames.. but I could be wrong...
  21. DKtucson

    odd recording -people out of nowhere

    she hired an engineer to argue that a toilet at full bore flow couldn't consume that much water--if it was a "slab leak" or a main on her side of the meter it would have washed out her yard. No neighbors with pools that got a refill from her tap--best guess is a faulty meter--but a few months after the cams were in it caught a drive-by shooting so shes glad they were up
  22. DKtucson

    odd recording -people out of nowhere

    Thanks again.. yeah the eating up of the hd is a bit of concern..here's that situation: the gal who I built the system for leaves town for the summer and the dvr pc is left running--a while back she came home to a $3000 water bill so she wanted cameras. With her being gone she wants a bottomless pit of recordings. The 8 cams average 5gb a day--thats 200 days for a 1TB drive so it covers her absence..but if the files grow we don't want to come up short.. the alternative is to slap a bigger drive in
  23. DKtucson

    odd recording -people out of nowhere

    thanks Kawboy..I think I recall a pre-record doo-dah field in the setup screens
  24. DKtucson

    They stole my car seats Help with new system

    most likely a bot spamming any forum with "car seats" in the mention
  25. Hey Folks, So here's the story.. A guy needs his installed system looked at.Owns a bar and the tenants went belly up and took the DVR's/monitoring stations out. Transformers on the wall pumping out 24VAC to box cameras at various points. LED on cam is a go..but no signal. There are 16 coax wires in one office and 16 in another There has to be a multiplexer or at the very least an area where there are Coax splitters to send the images to both offices from the cameras. The cams are samsung SDC-311NA . Got the manual--tried various dipswitch settings and cabled right to the DVR bypassing the house wiring and we get what I would call "blue oatmeal" --so we do get signal but no real video output..maker's date on the cams is 2003 and I fiddled with manual iris open/close. The cams are NTSC as is the capture card in the PC used If I hook up my camera to the same cable we made then it works fine If I use his house cabling and a known good power supply my camera does NOT work My best guess is that there has to be a juncture/splitter somewhere and it's just a matter of finding where... And his cameras seem to be toast...Am I right or am I high...?
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