Video Recording Systems
One of the most important pieces to your surveillance system is your surveillance video recorder. Whether you have one, four or sixteen cameras you have to take what those cameras see and store that video for reference or possible evidence. Now you need to decide whether you want to record digitally to a DVR or record onto VHS tapes using a VCR.
What surveillance
video recorder
is right for you?
Digital Video Recorder (DVR) - Unlike
VCRs, DVRs record video to a computer hard drive or other media
such as a CD or DVD. This makes a DVR easy to maintain because there
are no bulky tapes to change or the risk of losing video quality
when recording over previous footage. Except for the World's Smallest
DVR, all of our other DVRs can be operated and monitored remotely
from anywhere in the world using the Internet. While the surveillance
video data is stored on the DVR it can be protected from loss caused
by operating errors, tampering and accidents.
VCRs - VCRs record to a video cassette
tape which creates the need to change tapes. So we built our VCRs
with time-lapse and video motion detection features. Video motion
dection allows the VCR to begin recording only while motion is detected.
Time-lapse is a series of images taken in a set number of time intervals.
This means that not every frame is recorded as it is with Real Time.
Time-lapse and motion detection help space on your video tapes.
VISEC Surveillance Software - VISEC
is a software that is installed on an existing computer that you
own. VISEC turns that computer into a surveillance system. You can
connect up to four cameras to the computer and the video can be
set-up to record to your computer, VISEC's server or an FTP site.
VISEC can be run in hidden mode, which means that anyone using your
computer would not know it's running. |