![]() ![]() I had used version 4.x of SecuritySpy for years. SecuritySpy came back up running and recording and I never had to do anything. Once after many months the i5 Mac mini rebooted itself. I have had the camera server running for multiple months with no attention. The software basically runs itself once you have it set up. It sets this time frame based on my location. As the months progress, SecuritySpy changes the time daily that alerts are enabled. I have SecuritySpy set up to do this only from sunset to sunrise. One alert I use often is to alert me when there is motion in the garage. You can set up alerts and have them send by email or in the app. You can view footage, enable and disable recording, and much more. SecuritySpy offers an app for $5 on the Apple App Store that lets you control your cameras from anywhere. This is a testament to the coding of SecuritySpy. This is quite impressive for 9 cameras on such old hardware. On an older 2014 Mac mini I am recording nine cameras using motion detection, and the processor usage for SecuritySpy on the Intel i5 processor stays anywhere from 12 to 15%. Not only can it record any number of cameras you want, but uses very little processing power. The software is too advanced to go into a deep review, but if you have any interest at all in recording cameras, SecuritySpy is the go-to software. I have the 16 camera version and normally record 9 to 11 cameras. There are tiers one can purchase such as 1, 4, 8, 16 and unlimited cameras. SecuritySpy can record an unlimited number of cameras. ![]()
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