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Video Surveillance with WHS

Jim Cheshire writes about his experiences in using video surveillance at home with software which is installed on his Windows Home Server.

LuxRiot

Using a Sharx SCNC2607 camera and the LuxRiot surveillance DVR package, Jim has this package running on WHS as a service and client software on his PCs enabling him to record motion detected footage.

You can read the full details here.

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Comments (4)

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  1. I suggest to use Vitamin D from http://www.VitaminDinc.com as the DVR package.

    It works with most camera models, is relatively inexpensive (free for 1 or 2 cams) and is VERY good at detecting people / objects. It also runs as a service under Windows Home Server so there is no need to keep the admin account logged in.

    The number of false positives is greatly reduced with this software.

    Believe me, I tried them all. 🙂

  2. Orlando says:

    @ Martijn Wismeijer.
    Thanks a lot for the link!!!

  3. Andrew says:

    How do you get it to run as a service? I tried but was not successful. Vitamin D is a pretty impressive piece of software…..

    • Unfortunately current versions of VitaminD do not run as a service very well. I therefore enabled auto-logon on the WHS units I run vitaminD on and run VitaminD on logon.

      Works very well, since the server is located in a secured area, there is no problem having auto-logon enabled.

      If you decide to logon manually, turn your windows-update to manual (not recommended!) or it will restart once a month after applying windows updates and VitaminD will stop.

      To enable auto-logon, tweak your registry or use a program like system scheduler if you are not comfortable hacking the registry.

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