What's new

TRENDnet Adds Two New 4K PoE Surveillance Cameras

  • SNBForums Code of Conduct

    SNBForums is a community for everyone, no matter what their level of experience.

    Please be tolerant and patient of others, especially newcomers. We are all here to share and learn!

    The rules are simple: Be patient, be nice, be helpful or be gone!

thiggins

Mr. Easy
Staff member
trendnet_tv-ip318pi.jpg
TRENDnet has added a pair of indoor/outdoor 4K security cameras.

Read on SmallNetBuilder
 
For the price, it should support 4K 60 FPS.
When you look at the camera module in a device like the galaxy s8 or pixels 2, they are spending less than $15 on the camera module.
If these camera makers want to justify a steep price like that, they need to offer better performance.
 
Hello.

There would be no reason for that. You would never be able to record that for any period of time . 60 p is barely something broadcast uses let alone a dvr .

20 is pretty high for 4k that your recording 24,7 and 265 is really not even being used that much.

D.
 
With h.265 VBR, it is possible to dynamically adjust the quality when motion is detected. or if the camera has a sub-stream, you could potentially have a 1080p or 4K20FPS sub stream that is recorded 24/7, and then a rolling buffer from a 4K 60FPS stream of around an hour where when motion is detected, the motion highlight will contain video data from the 4K 60FPS stream along with a user selected time period before and after the motion event.

Today, you can buy a smartphone for less than $300 that will do 4K 30FPS with OIS (e.g., the Axon 7). if you have an IP camera with no AMOLED display, 64GB internal storage, multiple RF front ends for cellular data, Bluetooth, WiFi, and NFC, along with many other components not needed in a security camera, the least they could do is make an IP camera that takes the camera aspect to the next level.

Make it so that it is up to the user to determine the frame rate and quality they record at. A user with 100+TB of storage may be fine with 4K 60FPS using h.265 VBR.
 
With h.265 VBR, it is possible to dynamically adjust the quality when motion is detected. or if the camera has a sub-stream, you could potentially have a 1080p or 4K20FPS sub stream that is recorded 24/7, and then a rolling buffer from a 4K 60FPS stream of around an hour where when motion is detected, the motion highlight will contain video data from the 4K 60FPS stream along with a user selected time period before and after the motion event.

Today, you can buy a smartphone for less than $300 that will do 4K 30FPS with OIS (e.g., the Axon 7). if you have an IP camera with no AMOLED display, 64GB internal storage, multiple RF front ends for cellular data, Bluetooth, WiFi, and NFC, along with many other components not needed in a security camera, the least they could do is make an IP camera that takes the camera aspect to the next level.

Make it so that it is up to the user to determine the frame rate and quality they record at. A user with 100+TB of storage may be fine with 4K 60FPS using h.265 VBR.
The camera cpu cannot handle 60fps...there is absolutely no need for 60fps with respect for surveillance cameras..4k is not needed either and in fact are significantly worse in low light scenes compared to dedicated 1080p low light cameras. https://ipcamtalk.com/threads/dahua-starlight-varifocal-turret-ipc-hdw5231r-z.14683/
 
How is the 850nm IR wavelength "covert"? I always thought 940nm was the "out of naked eye" range.
 

Support SNBForums w/ Amazon

If you'd like to support SNBForums, just use this link and buy anything on Amazon. Thanks!

Sign Up For SNBForums Daily Digest

Get an update of what's new every day delivered to your mailbox. Sign up here!
Top