

- #Best ip camera for qnap surveillance station how to#
- #Best ip camera for qnap surveillance station software#
Sorry to be so blunt - but is there any chance you could send them back? d=Ubiquity Looking at the specs - they are very expensive for what they do, low-light performance very poor, small low-res sensor, don't even seem to support de-facto standards such as ONVIF which might have allowed connection to Surveillance Station as an unsupported camera. Is that something you checked before you bought the cameras?. But I doubt you will be doing anything like that because those cameras do not seem to be on the Surveillance Station compatibility list. All Surveillance Station allows you to do is to record and play back the video from the cameras on to the NAS storage, based on your settings for either continuous or motion-detection recording action.
#Best ip camera for qnap surveillance station software#
Is 'IP Surveillance' some software that comes with the Ubiquiti cameras? It looks like Ubiquiti want to lock you into their proprietary scheme with some smart marketing as opposed to technical excellence. Like Dolbyman, I don't really understand your question. Can someone enlighten me and let me know if I'm correct as far as setting these cameras up using the surveillance station or not? What's the differerence between this and IP Surveillance? Is IP Surveillance used only to be able to access a webcam that's connected to your network and see through the camera but doesn't offer recording, multiple cameras, and features similar to a surveillance system? I would really appreciate some advice on where to start with this before I waste hours trying to set something up that will never work. I just want to make sure I'm starting at the right spot.
#Best ip camera for qnap surveillance station how to#
Are these camera compatible with QNAP's NVR system? I don't expect anyone to explain how to do this step by step, but I would really appreciate it if someone can just point me in the right direction, and then I'm pretty sure I can figure it out as I go along. In order to set these up in different locations and have my QNAP setup to record the video (I'm not even sure if the amount of hard drive space for capturing video needs to be set or if this works some other way), where would I begin to start setting these up? I've already seen where I can buy additional licences for cameras if I'm using more than the 2 licenses the QNAP came with, but before I start down that road, buy licenses, and start setting these up, I want to make sure this is how I'm supposed to use them or if I'm supposed to do this another way. I have 6 cameras right now, and all of them are Ubiquiti UniFi G3 Camera, and all my other networking equipment is Ubiquiti UniFi as well. I'm not sure if I'm supposed to set them up using the Surveillance Station or set them up as IP Surveillance because I don't even know what difference there is between the two of them. I recently bought some cameras that I would like to mount around the exterior of my house for security, but I'm not sure where to start. I have a question regarding running cameras on my network, and from what I've seen, there are a couple of ways to do this and/or only specific cameras can perform specific functions. I've only had my TS-451+ for a couple of months now, and before this, I've always used a standard external hardrive setup on my network for backups so all the functionality of this QNAP is very overwhelming. With Linux and ZFS, QuTS hero supports advanced data reduction technologies for further driving down costs and increasing reliablility of SSD (all-flash) storage.Please forgive me if this question is elementary.

QuTS hero is the operating system for high-end and enterprise QNAP NAS models. WIth Linux and ext4, QTS enables reliable storage for everyone with versatile value-added features and apps, such as snapshots, Plex media servers, and easy access of your personal cloud. QTS is the operating system for entry- and mid-level QNAP NAS.
