![]() ![]() Other settings or adjustments to try in BI Other NVR software that may be less resource intensive And it is only compatible with my new cameras so it would force me to upgrade the rest of them all at once.ĭoes anyone have any suggestions for eitherĭecent standalone NVR that can handle 16 4k streams, with a good UI/configurability Compared to BI, it's garbage and not anywhere near as user friendly. I was frustrated enough that I actually picked up an NVR that is supposed to be able to do 16 4k cams 30fps. ![]() I even updated my subscription so that I could download the latest update of BI 5. I've also set the preview to the substream channel, which helped with CPU usage but did not help with recording rate. I've adjusted the framerate in the camera UI, in BI settings, switched to H265, and everything was already direct-to-disk. When I've replaced 3 of the cameras with the 5mp cameras, I can not get a good frame rate on those 3 cams. It's dual Xeon X5672 3.2ghz (8 physical 8 ht cores), 64gb ram, and a GeForce GT710 GPU. The system specs aren't crazy, but I had pretty much flawless performance with 12 1080p cameras so I figured I had a decent amount of overhead. My server is dedicated to camera recording and network storage (but 99% camera - mainly an occasional backup NAS). Planning on upgrading all the cameras to 5mp. My system has expanded, and now I have 12 cameras. At least from what I came across at the time. I tried a few different available NVR software programs when I first deployed my camera system and found BI was the best - in both performance and interface. This is really the only difference that I am aware of between the "Retail" and "OEM" versions of Windows - the ability to transfer the license to a new machine/motherboard.I've been using BI for a few years. However there are a lot of Windows users that don't understand this, so it is quite possible that they don't go through the process of contacting MS to transfer the license to a new machine and it would still activate under the old hardware (if you bought it used for example). It requires communication with MS so that they allow the software to "link" itself to a new motherboard, but this is allowed (at least in the past it was - I haven't tried it recently to know if it happens automatically now or not). ![]() ![]() They activate just fine and don't require a new license number to be purchased/entered.Ī full Retail version of Windows (non-OEM) can be "transferred" to a new computer/motherboard if needed. The one's I've bought have all had OEM Windows 10 Pro installed/activated on them at some point in their "lives". (These SFF computers are very popular with businesses and are sold by resellers when they come off lease). I've done this myself several times when I've bought SFF computers off EBay. If you buy a used computer off Ebay that states "No OS included" but the machine had an OEM version of Windows installed/activated on it at some point previously, you can generally install Windows on it and it will automatically activate itself when it phones into MS servers. If you try to use that same OEM license number on another computer (or even the same computer with a new motherboard), it will not activate due to the hardware mismatch.īut to answer your question, yes. Click to expand.I don't know/understand the technical details to how this works, but my understanding is that motherboards have some sort of identifying number that is recorded and reported to MS when you activate a Windows license. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |