So I started looking into Home Security cameras, and although I love the ease of cameras like Ring, and their low cost monthly cloud storage options I knew right away that Wifi is crap. I have two wired indoor cameras that I use to monitor my young children in their cribs and even though they are wired, not being in control of setting up the internet access of those cameras already causes me issues.....anywho that's my limited background.
My entire home is already wired for ethernet, former homeowner was a network engineer, there is a patch panel in the basement, every room has two ethernet jacks, and I have a 50 port gigabit switch. I plan on getting a POE switch and use 1 of the 2 ports in each room that is close to where I want a camera to be outside to be POE ports for my cameras and I can just poke a hole through the wall for the Ethernet cable.
So on to my questions, basically they are all around which components are responsible for what.
1. Where is the processing for motion detection/recording in general? Is that part of the camera hardware or is that something your back-end handles (be it blue iris or an NVR)?
2. How are motion zones configured, is that something on board on the camera, or your back-end?
3. Same question on alerts?
4. If I went NVR over blue iris, does an NVR have a login page with configuration options for the cameras?
I watched a video on Blue Iris, and I see a ton of configuration options like resolution, frame rate etc...and I'm just a little confused how back-end software manages that, is it somehow abstracting away the configuration of different cameras, or is it displaying what it knows the camera can do? Are most cameras configurable on an individual direct to camera basis without back-end software?
Could I Just buy let's say a Dahua camera, power it with POE, and just let it use the SD card for very little recording? (I wouldn't do this I'm just trying to understand what the camera can do on its own) Would I then use some app or something to directly configure certain things on the camera?
I know I have a ton of research to do, which I look forward to, but again just trying to understand what is responsible for what. I want to start with 1 camera for the front of my house, mainly to cover my front door for packages and to watch over my Robot lawnmower then I will expand from there.
Thanks
My entire home is already wired for ethernet, former homeowner was a network engineer, there is a patch panel in the basement, every room has two ethernet jacks, and I have a 50 port gigabit switch. I plan on getting a POE switch and use 1 of the 2 ports in each room that is close to where I want a camera to be outside to be POE ports for my cameras and I can just poke a hole through the wall for the Ethernet cable.
So on to my questions, basically they are all around which components are responsible for what.
1. Where is the processing for motion detection/recording in general? Is that part of the camera hardware or is that something your back-end handles (be it blue iris or an NVR)?
2. How are motion zones configured, is that something on board on the camera, or your back-end?
3. Same question on alerts?
4. If I went NVR over blue iris, does an NVR have a login page with configuration options for the cameras?
I watched a video on Blue Iris, and I see a ton of configuration options like resolution, frame rate etc...and I'm just a little confused how back-end software manages that, is it somehow abstracting away the configuration of different cameras, or is it displaying what it knows the camera can do? Are most cameras configurable on an individual direct to camera basis without back-end software?
Could I Just buy let's say a Dahua camera, power it with POE, and just let it use the SD card for very little recording? (I wouldn't do this I'm just trying to understand what the camera can do on its own) Would I then use some app or something to directly configure certain things on the camera?
I know I have a ton of research to do, which I look forward to, but again just trying to understand what is responsible for what. I want to start with 1 camera for the front of my house, mainly to cover my front door for packages and to watch over my Robot lawnmower then I will expand from there.
Thanks