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The Water Cooler
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Security Cam Question
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<blockquote data-quote="BryanDP" data-source="post: 3044734" data-attributes="member: 1111"><p>NVR is a Network Video Recorder. This is a type of DVR that can record IP cameras that are up and running on the same network. A DVR is just a video recorder with BNC or some proprietary connections. The benefit of the NVR is that each of the cameras just plugs into your network and so does the NVR. In a DVR situation every camera has to make a home run back to the DVR. If you get 8 1080p cameras running on a network it better be a pretty robust network. For most DIY folks a DVR is a cheaper and simpler setup if you can get it all wired.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I tried them and was not impressed. I bought five sets of three outdoor cameras and a hub. I ended up with two of the five hubs not working and at least one of the cameras not working. I gave up and returned them before I even got all the cameras tested. The ones that did get working were not as much motion video cameras as they were cameras that took a whole bunch of still pictures. It seemed like may be one frame per second or less.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BryanDP, post: 3044734, member: 1111"] NVR is a Network Video Recorder. This is a type of DVR that can record IP cameras that are up and running on the same network. A DVR is just a video recorder with BNC or some proprietary connections. The benefit of the NVR is that each of the cameras just plugs into your network and so does the NVR. In a DVR situation every camera has to make a home run back to the DVR. If you get 8 1080p cameras running on a network it better be a pretty robust network. For most DIY folks a DVR is a cheaper and simpler setup if you can get it all wired. I tried them and was not impressed. I bought five sets of three outdoor cameras and a hub. I ended up with two of the five hubs not working and at least one of the cameras not working. I gave up and returned them before I even got all the cameras tested. The ones that did get working were not as much motion video cameras as they were cameras that took a whole bunch of still pictures. It seemed like may be one frame per second or less. [/QUOTE]
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