Specifications

Blue Iris Help Copyright © 2012 Perspective Software
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Windows XP visual style now used for all common controls. You'll only notice a change
if you're using Windows XP!
New Advanced Motion Sensor (See 7.3) options for more reliable operation in low-light
conditions.
1.10
FTP files to your remote website (See 7.7) to indicate whether or not your webcam is
available.
The browse-your-homepage feature (the Earth icon) now opens the browser as a Blue
Iris window. Next to the "X" close button for this new window is a button which will
open the browser on the desktop instead.
If you have the Windows Media components installed, you may now perform both JPEG
and Windows Media webcasting
(See 7.6) simultaneously, on separate ports. There are
also new "audio-only" Windows Media profiles available, which allow you to combine
JPEG images with Windows Media audio. An updated default.htm home page
automatically checks for this combination and sets up the necessary objects.
Right-click in a camera window and select "Open in desktop window" to give a camera
its own desktop window.
Crossbar support for analog capture devices with multiple inputs.
1.09
The built-in web server is now capable of serving up a list of cameras, as well as a list of
clips, thumbnail images, and the clips themselves. The default.htm and BlueIris.cab/jar
files have also been updated. The new default.htm contains the JavaScript necessary to
switch between cameras, and to view the clips. If using these new pages, you should
leave BlueIris's clip list showing the Current clips ordered "newest first."
To preserve compatibility with most HTML editors, the %SERVERNAME% and new
macros now use double % symbols. That is, the server name is now represented by
using %%SERVERNAME%%.
When new cameras are added, Blue Iris automatically uses the next unique device name
and webcasting port number.
1.08
Manually record a movie by using a new toolbar icon (See 4.).
Prevent screensaver and system suspend modes using new options page (See 11.)
settings.
Java JPEG refresh ("pull") webcasting script and server code revised for better
efficiency. Also, if the script senses a "timeout" (no image is received for 10 seconds), it
will automatically restart the script.