![]() Because of the sym-links, any changes are of course written back to the 'portable' directory. Config stuff is sym-linked into place at launch, and sym-links removed again at close. I've mentioned it to him a couple of times in the past, but I think he's wedded to his ZoneMinder setup!īecause of the single binary, it occurred to me last night that I could probably "portabilize" it (same as many that use an AppImage at their heart), so.that's what I've done. I don't know quite what Erik thinks of this thing. and can be downloaded as a PDF if you need it, although the configuration window is quite self-explanatory (Xeoma is described as being "Lego-like, of modular construction" by its devs). The full instruction manual can be found here:. The basic, free version only lets you use up to 4 cameras, but for a small private house/flat/dwelling, this is more than enough for most people. The paid plans will let you monitor up to several hundred cameras simultaneously, along with setting-up motion detection & all the rest of it. It works with any type of camera it can detect not only IP cameras, but also ordinary webcams, so if like me you've got a couple of spare webcams kicking around the place it's pretty easy to set up a basic surveillance system.one watching the front of the house, perhaps one watching the back door, maybe another one watching the back garden out of an upstairs window.that kind of thing. You can select from paid plans, or you can select from the free version during initial set-up. What attracted me to it was the ease-of-use, and the fact that the whole thing is contained within a single, statically-compiled binary. Coincidentally, someone else was asking about CCTV apps at that time, so I got curious, looked around to see what else was available, and found Xeoma, from FelenaSoft. I first discovered Xeoma a few years ago.round about the time, I believe, when first started playing with ZoneMinder and was publishing semi-regular 'progress reports'. I am running exiftool 10.Ever fancied a completely portable home CCTV client? Well, here's one. I do know that mediainfo is suited more for video and audio files rather than images but would be nice if one tool could do it all. I did also scour the local manpage as well as -help but was not able to get far. I went to mediainfo upstream and saw this page but was unable to comprehend which feature to vote for so it will give more metadata info. Green Tone Reproduction Curve : (Binary data 2060 bytes, use -b option to extract)īlue Tone Reproduction Curve : (Binary data 2060 bytes, use -b option to extract)Įncoding Process : Baseline DCT, Huffman coding Red Tone Reproduction Curve : (Binary data 2060 bytes, use -b option to extract) ![]() Viewing Cond Desc : Reference Viewing Condition in IEC61966-2.1 Profile Copyright : Copyright (c) 1998 Hewlett-Packard Company Let's see what mediainfo says on an image - $ mediainfo ZQs3vcsHiGY.jpg I have been scratching my head on this for quite some time now.
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