ah who needs sleep, I need to tinker with this idea now. I'm actually really curious about this now that this came to mind. Use the 'View page source' option in your browser (usually available via right mouse button, anywhere on the page) Search the page source for 'rtsp' (Real Time Streaming Protocol) URLs. I'm suddenly curious if this could be leveraged somehow in an ffplay window. Use this method to determine the URL for your video feed: Pull up the web interface for viewing the camera image/video. The VMS I use, Bluecherry, pulls in its live feeds over ffmpeg. Really just spit balling to get ideas rolling, even if they're not great. Is it possible to embed an RTSP stream right within a video element of HTML code these days? If so, it stands to reason that you could whip up your own local.html file with a basic web page layout that pulls in the streams. I've been out of the HTML game for a number of years. I'm not sure what Windows' capability is with commanding an application to launch at an exact point on the screen, but if so that could be a quick and dirty idea (re: while this worked great on my Linux rig and can't comment on Windows, I'm not necessarily saying this is a great idea, but possibly 'an' idea). A quick script later, bound to a shortcut key, and I was literally able to hit that keystroke and all of them would pop up in the exact order and positioning that was set for each window. That way I could launch, basically, 8 instances of MPV, VLC, etc and they would all line up at the exact points they were designated to. Something I did once upon a time on a Linux system was set up shortcuts to a video player that would launch that video player to exact parameters of the screen. Who knows though, maybe things have changed since then - been a long while since I last tried. Use any USB or IP camera is to keep an eye on your home, office, parking area or anywhere you need. Once the cameras are setup for recording, you could quickly search recorded video and export events as movies or just images. OWLR IP CAMERA VIEWER APP FEATURES: - Autodiscovery of Foscam, Axis and DLink IP cameras (no IP address necessary) - External access to camera if UPnP is enabled on your router. To connect a new IP camera, click Camera > Add Camera and select the option IP Camera. The app allows to easily setup recording video on schedule, or events only (Motion Detection, Person Detection, etc). IP Cameras do not plug directly into your computer like webcams. I received some help from VLC devs in their IRC but the general vibe I got from them wasn't too high regarding getting that to work, which ultimately resulted in me exhausting what documentation I could find to no success. Overview Certified What's New Set up an effective video monitoring system within minutes. Use IP Camera Viewer 2 app to monitor and record video from up to 8 IP Cameras. I looked into that a while back and was unable to get it working. With IP Camera Multiple Viewer, you view all cameras simultaneously in a scalable viewport, just like a traffic camera control center, for example. Code released under the Apache License 2.0.I'd be curious if the VLC Mosaic feature works.
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