I am redoing my parents house. They have an old analogue system which has about bit the dust.
After searching for a DVR (now NVR) replacement, i discovered the various issues of mix and match problems, expense, etc... and think Blue Iris is a better solution. That will let me RDP into the box to fix anything when I am not here.
So the questions are:
1) Build.
It's going in the home entertainment cabinet. Silence (and obviously performance) are high priorities. Am I better off with an 8th gen i7-8700 optiplex SFF or a newer mini-pc type (like an 11th gen but mobile type chip)?
In either case, I plan on WIn 10 or Win 11 Pro, 32GB Ram and WD purple either internal in an SFF optiplex or USB3 external if the mini PC route.
2) Can I mix and match cameras and still get all the functionality? IE I want Night-Time colorvision all around. There are 12 cameras and it would be god-awful expensive to do all of them with Empire's 8MP Hikivision. I was planning on two of those (front door and by the garage) and Reolink CX410 bullets for the long strips on the sides and yard. At $100 for 8 Reolink's, the savings are substantial.
3) Ease of use.
I'd like to be able to have an HDMI from the PC to the TV so they switch the input and see all cameras. They both use iphones, I use android. Would need push notifications when motion (preferably AI determines its humans) sent to phones.
4) Cabling
All of it is Cat5e. I presume this is good enough? It would be a PITA to have to re-wire but I do plan on using one of the cables to "go backwards" and add an 8 port POE elsewhere to expand the system from the 9 cameras they have to 11 or 12.
Given I'm not usually here to maintain it and based on everything mentioned, am I going the correct route with Blue Iris as opposed to a bundled NVR / camera system, can I do all of the above, and are there advantages to higher than 8th gen in the PC? What do I really need to future proof this thing and only have to do occasional updates to the software?
After searching for a DVR (now NVR) replacement, i discovered the various issues of mix and match problems, expense, etc... and think Blue Iris is a better solution. That will let me RDP into the box to fix anything when I am not here.
So the questions are:
1) Build.
It's going in the home entertainment cabinet. Silence (and obviously performance) are high priorities. Am I better off with an 8th gen i7-8700 optiplex SFF or a newer mini-pc type (like an 11th gen but mobile type chip)?
In either case, I plan on WIn 10 or Win 11 Pro, 32GB Ram and WD purple either internal in an SFF optiplex or USB3 external if the mini PC route.
2) Can I mix and match cameras and still get all the functionality? IE I want Night-Time colorvision all around. There are 12 cameras and it would be god-awful expensive to do all of them with Empire's 8MP Hikivision. I was planning on two of those (front door and by the garage) and Reolink CX410 bullets for the long strips on the sides and yard. At $100 for 8 Reolink's, the savings are substantial.
3) Ease of use.
I'd like to be able to have an HDMI from the PC to the TV so they switch the input and see all cameras. They both use iphones, I use android. Would need push notifications when motion (preferably AI determines its humans) sent to phones.
4) Cabling
All of it is Cat5e. I presume this is good enough? It would be a PITA to have to re-wire but I do plan on using one of the cables to "go backwards" and add an 8 port POE elsewhere to expand the system from the 9 cameras they have to 11 or 12.
Given I'm not usually here to maintain it and based on everything mentioned, am I going the correct route with Blue Iris as opposed to a bundled NVR / camera system, can I do all of the above, and are there advantages to higher than 8th gen in the PC? What do I really need to future proof this thing and only have to do occasional updates to the software?