Hello
I am new here
I planning to build security cameras system in my house
But i am little beat confused
Is there any documentation how to setup Blue Iris
I have questions if someone could help me please
Do I still need NVR recorder in order to setup Blue Iris server?
If I don’t need NVR recorder how do I connect cameras to pc?
Any help I would appreciate.
Thanks
New system setup
Re: New system setup
So there is a relatively large help file included with the BI installer (200+ pages). There is also the new BI YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDkejn ... PfI7l2u64g
There are multiple options that Blue Iris supports but the cleanest and easiest way is to utilize IP cameras, either PoE (recommended) or ones that use WiFi. These cameras work directly with a Blue Iris server with nothing else required other than a switch (potentially a switch that supports PoE if you want it clean and done right). Assuming the Blue Iris server is built with plenty of storage capacity - multiple TBs if possible - no other system is needed. You could use a separate NAS or something but that goes into the other 'options'.
Simply put, you need networked IP cameras and a robust Blue Iris server. Thats it. The brand or model cameras is pretty much up to you, what design you're looking for, the prices you can find, etc. There is no official "recommended" or "Supported" list as most will work. There are posts scattered around on this forum of what experienced users are using and what they prefer.
There are multiple options that Blue Iris supports but the cleanest and easiest way is to utilize IP cameras, either PoE (recommended) or ones that use WiFi. These cameras work directly with a Blue Iris server with nothing else required other than a switch (potentially a switch that supports PoE if you want it clean and done right). Assuming the Blue Iris server is built with plenty of storage capacity - multiple TBs if possible - no other system is needed. You could use a separate NAS or something but that goes into the other 'options'.
Simply put, you need networked IP cameras and a robust Blue Iris server. Thats it. The brand or model cameras is pretty much up to you, what design you're looking for, the prices you can find, etc. There is no official "recommended" or "Supported" list as most will work. There are posts scattered around on this forum of what experienced users are using and what they prefer.
Blue Iris 5.9.9.x | Server 2025 VM | Xeon E5-2660 v3 @ 2.60GHz - 32 Cores | 48GB RAM | 8TB RAID | Sophos UTM WAF | Mostly various SV3C Cameras
Re: New system setup
Great.Matts1984 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 15, 2021 12:29 pm So there is a relatively large help file included with the BI installer (200+ pages). There is also the new BI YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDkejn ... PfI7l2u64g
There are multiple options that Blue Iris supports but the cleanest and easiest way is to utilize IP cameras, either PoE (recommended) or ones that use WiFi. These cameras work directly with a Blue Iris server with nothing else required other than a switch (potentially a switch that supports PoE if you want it clean and done right). Assuming the Blue Iris server is built with plenty of storage capacity - multiple TBs if possible - no other system is needed. You could use a separate NAS or something but that goes into the other 'options'.
Simply put, you need networked IP cameras and a robust Blue Iris server. Thats it. The brand or model cameras is pretty much up to you, what design you're looking for, the prices you can find, etc. There is no official "recommended" or "Supported" list as most will work. There are posts scattered around on this forum of what experienced users are using and what they prefer.
Now i have a clear picture.
Thank you very much.
Re: New system setup
As Matt said.... Blue Iris IS the NVR.
BI pulls video streams directly from IP cameras.
It is time to sunset the old analog camera model where there is a dedicated hardware box that transcodes all of the analog streams into digital.
BI pulls video streams directly from IP cameras.
It is time to sunset the old analog camera model where there is a dedicated hardware box that transcodes all of the analog streams into digital.