First question is: are there any quality NVRs that are able to stream multiple camera feeds at full 4K. I'm curious because I know of some Blue Iris setups I've seen online where I would imagine they are more powerful than a NVR, but they struggle to have multiple 4K streams and they rely on substreams, so I'm suspicious that any NVR out there is able to do multiple 4K streams. Most products out there don't mention anything about substreams/live stream quality vs what is actually being recorded. A lot of people I know assume the cameras they buy, especially the low quality stuff they get on Amazon or Costco will give them a live 4K feed of all 12 cameras they have, but I'm doubtful of that. At the very least can NVRs be adjusted so that 4 streams can be viewed at higher quality vs 10 streams and so on and so forth. Is this something that can also be done with Blue Iris?
We currently have an old super outdated DVR, but it's dumb enough that people here can just press a button and it will toggle between different number of streams (single, 4, 8, 12, 16). Since the feed is pretty low resolution, it can stream everything just fine, but I'm aware this isn't the case when you start moving up in resolution unless you have a very high end CPU.
Say I wanted something similar, but with substream setup in place to adjust based on the # of concurrent feeds being viewed so that the system doesn't get overloaded (assuming it's just not capable of viewing 10+ cameras at 4MP or higher at the same time), are most NVRs, including Blue Iris, capable of doing this automatically, so that when the user selects a single feed it'll show the full 4k resolution, then goes down to say 4MP at 4 stream, then 1080p at 12, or whatever the machine is capable of doing?
I'd like something to be setup like this because we don't really need high resolution when viewing all the cameras at the same time on the screen, but say someone notices suspicious activity on camera 5, I'd like the person to be able to toggle the single view of that specific camera and get the highest resolution possible. I'd also like it so that the user doesn't have to go and manually set a higher resolution just for that specific case.
We currently have an old super outdated DVR, but it's dumb enough that people here can just press a button and it will toggle between different number of streams (single, 4, 8, 12, 16). Since the feed is pretty low resolution, it can stream everything just fine, but I'm aware this isn't the case when you start moving up in resolution unless you have a very high end CPU.
Say I wanted something similar, but with substream setup in place to adjust based on the # of concurrent feeds being viewed so that the system doesn't get overloaded (assuming it's just not capable of viewing 10+ cameras at 4MP or higher at the same time), are most NVRs, including Blue Iris, capable of doing this automatically, so that when the user selects a single feed it'll show the full 4k resolution, then goes down to say 4MP at 4 stream, then 1080p at 12, or whatever the machine is capable of doing?
I'd like something to be setup like this because we don't really need high resolution when viewing all the cameras at the same time on the screen, but say someone notices suspicious activity on camera 5, I'd like the person to be able to toggle the single view of that specific camera and get the highest resolution possible. I'd also like it so that the user doesn't have to go and manually set a higher resolution just for that specific case.