Hello,
IT guy here (mainly software) trying to add a security cameras to his house.
I have been reading for a long time and I finally decided to post here so I can validate my assumptions. If you see I'm down a painful path please let me know
Context
I'm planning to add 4 cameras initially, all outdoor, and I don't see this system growing past 8 cameras.
I want at least 1 varifocal camera for my driveway and the rest probably just regular cameras (more on this later).
These are the expectations I have for this system:
This is my main struggle at the moment. I was almost sold on BlueIris until I realized how much resources it requires. Now I'm seriously considering a NVR appliance. I have read of people going one way or the other. In my case, going with a hardware NVR:
Any comments or feedback will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
R. Rod
IT guy here (mainly software) trying to add a security cameras to his house.
I have been reading for a long time and I finally decided to post here so I can validate my assumptions. If you see I'm down a painful path please let me know

Context
I'm planning to add 4 cameras initially, all outdoor, and I don't see this system growing past 8 cameras.
I want at least 1 varifocal camera for my driveway and the rest probably just regular cameras (more on this later).
These are the expectations I have for this system:
- Good quality image both at daylight or nighttime.
- Recording 24/7 is not a requirement (unless I'm making a big mistake here). Recording on motion detection should probably be enough.
- I would like some degree of integration with HomeAssistant (my home automation controller) so I can turn on lights on certain circumstances, etc.
- Push notifications on certain cameras under certain conditions.
- Snapshots for alerts are sent to email or pushed to an external resource (cloud, ftp, etc).
- Camera firmware can be updated
- NVR can be updated
- 4MP cameras.
- Almost sold on Reolink. I'm checking Dahua too, it looks like it is the favorite on this forum.
- POE - House is wired
This is my main struggle at the moment. I was almost sold on BlueIris until I realized how much resources it requires. Now I'm seriously considering a NVR appliance. I have read of people going one way or the other. In my case, going with a hardware NVR:
- It would require less power to run. (I don't have a basement, so low power, low noise is important).
- Noise. Even when some NVR units are loud, I'm willing to replace the fans with Noctua fans for a silent operation. The rest of my network equipment is fanless.
- It wouldn't require buying a POE switch.
- On power failure the NVR will be up for longer than the pc under the same conditions.
Any comments or feedback will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
R. Rod