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Q see qt view iphone
Q see qt view iphone







  1. Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE HOW TO
  2. Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE INSTALL
  3. Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE FULL
  4. Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE SOFTWARE

Oh and viewing is only for LIVE playback through smartphone.

Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE FULL

Rotate sideways gives you a full screen view of either single camera or bigger quad view. You can take a snapshot of a camera, record a bit of video directly from a camera to the phone, pretty cool I thought. You can only see the low resolution sub stream feed (CIF), but you can see 4-way quad view on the phone, which is nice.

Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE SOFTWARE

I've only used the iPhone remote viewing app, and The iphone viewing software is pretty nice too.

Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE HOW TO

Of course remote viewing requires you to setup port forwarding on your router, so you'll need to learn or know how to do that. THERE IS NO CLIENT PC/WINDOWS SOFTWARE AT ALL, ITS ALL ACTIVEX INTERNET EXPLORER BASED. Change color settings on cameras, configure alerts, schedule, backup video, review video, all through the internet explorer activex app. I can select master stream or sub (net) stream to view, either for all channels or individual channels. I can select single view, quad view, 6 view, 9 view, etc. I can remotely configure the entire DVR even when not on the LAN. NO MACINTOSH VIEWING OR ACCESS POSSIBLE AT THIS TIME, but an email to TVT tech support claims that a macintosh app is in the works for release soon.? The active x control interface in IE is pretty good in my opinion. It is remote viewable through a WINDOWS PC AND INTERNET EXPLORER ONLY USING ACTIVATE X CONTROL (or smart phone, iphone, blackberry, android, etc). And you can mask out sections of video completely, I'm sure that has its place - but I don't know why. Motion detection is very good, and you can select the area you want to detect motion and the sensitivity level, it brings up a grid over live video and you turn on/off squares in the to detect motion. One of things I liked about this one I was able to setup motion detection only during CLOSED hours, and recording 24/7, so this way I only get motion email alerts while we are closed - which worked out perfectly for me, as I have a retail store and wouldn't want email alerts every time a customer walked in the door or pulled in the parking lot. The DVR records in scheduled/continuous mode, scheduled motion detection mode, alarm sensor mode. This was not an issue for me, but- for anyone else beware, you will absolutely need a computer monitor in the beginning, once you log in to the system and turn on the composite output (which KILLS the vga port btw), you'll get menu access through composite and can complete setup on a standard tv or whatever. NO MENU OUTPUT VIA COMPOSITE OUT OF THE BOX. The only thing that would throw a common user a curve ball is the DVR will only work with a computer monitor hooked up through the VGA port on initial power up. It has a single wired ethernet port on the back, so no wifi. It automatically sync's to internet time servers at user selectable intervals so the clock is always accurate. Example: it detects motion, snaps 3 pictures over 6 seconds and emails me those 3 pictures during motion event schedule, video loss, etc. I was able to get Email alerts working using a Gmail account (using SSL), and it will send out the alerts as your select them to up to 3 recipients. (sorry mac users - no support yet, but TVT says their working on it)

q see qt view iphone

Q SEE QT VIEW IPHONE INSTALL

The best way is to get your network setup asap, then using Windows Internet Explorer, log in remotely on your LAN, install the ActiveX interface and complete setup there with keyboard and mouse on a PC.

q see qt view iphone

It has a graphic user interface that is pretty straight forward to setup.

q see qt view iphone

This model came preinstalled with 500GB HDD, has a single sata port and can be upgraded to 2TB drive. You can set each channel to record individually, FPS, Resolution, Quality, Bit rate up to 2048k at D1 (either CBR or VBR and in VBR there is also a quality setting). In my case, since I am currently only using 4 camera's (as an example) I can use all 60 FPS in 4 channels and get D1 at 15fps on each of the 4 cameras. Give's you 240 FPS at CIF or 60 FPS at D1 to distribute among the 8CH as you please. Which is actually made by TVT and is a TD-2308SE. This is my consumer review of the Q-see QT428 8CH DVR.









Q see qt view iphone