Like most of us with the older HIkVision cameras that were accessible in the past with just an IP address and the login and password, when FireFox and others began to update their browsers to eliminate some security concerns (which I understand were in part due to Java, but other modules, too), I lost the ability to see those cameras from any computer in my home, from behind the network router/firewall.
I did find the iVMS from HikVision, but after attaching one camera, I could not figure out how to attach more, and after one of the Windows updates, even that no longer connected.
A very nice hint from a user allowed me to use VLC, a video program that I had previously used only to play music and movies, has a network stream function, but again I had to start that program and step through quite a few details to open the camera.
Yesterday I heard from another private message about a browser I'd never heard of called SeaMonkey. A quick setup and I tried accessing the camera, and wow, it's just like things used to be. Sure, another browser, but one click bookmarks to access any of the several cameras, and I can take snapshots and even record video clips again.
My question is, if Firefox dropped some code and tightened up security that prevented me from using it to access the cameras, does SeaMonkey still contain risky code that might be a problem? No one but the family uses the network, so I'm not real worried about hackers from within. I find more functionality with SeaMonkey than with VLC, so that is a step (video recording, configuring the camera, etc) and having all the cameras in little bookmarks for one click changing is nice, but I doubt I'll abandon FireFox for SeaMonkey for my general browser right away.
Thoughts? Comments? Oh, I tried IE which others claim to have success with camera access and it didn't work, nor did Chrome nor Opera, at least when I tried them.
Thanks for your thoughts, Dale