D-Link Forums
The Graveyard - Products No Longer Supported => IP Cameras => DCS-942L => Topic started by: jaylgordon on July 10, 2013, 04:52:38 AM
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I got a new MacBook Pro and logged into the camera interface, and I was prompted to install "NCSPlugin." So I installed it, and I could view the cam fine. BUT... when I noticed my battery running out quickly, I checked the Activity Monitor on my computer for oddities. And I found that the plugin (in Chrome as well as Safari) was using a bizarre and impossible amount of CPU resources (like, 283%!). I know there could be several variables here, but is it possible this is a bug in the plugin? Or at least, is it possible the plugin is a resource hog?
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I'm also seeing this on a mid 2012 macbook pro using firefox, using 280 percent cpu, fans are going crazy.
running version 1.0.0.27 of the plugin
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same here 2.66 i7, 8GB ram, 10.8.4…
this renders the cam unusable !
what is this NCSPlugin in the first place and why does one just have to install and trust without any explanation ? really disappointed that a company degrades a product after some time by a firmware update.
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Add me to the list of people with maxed out CPU usage. What's really alarming is that even *after* I closed down my web browser NCSPlugin kept running, and gobbled up more and more system resources. Not sure I can trust a plugin that can so easily go rogue let alone a company that releases said plugin.
Let's keep this issue in the spotlight. Hopefully this can be resolved soon or I will have to find a product line to outfit the rest of my house with that is more stable and trustworthy. (Some of the new wireless security cams/sensors coming to market from upstarts are looking very promising so D-Link better get their stuff together or they might see their marketshare drop off.)
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I know this doesn't help, but here's a "me too." The plugin uses 300% CPU (3/4 of the processing cores) on my quad-i7 Macbook Pro.
The only way this is possible would be if the software uses polling (infinite loop) instead of a timer interrupt to time itself, which tells me someone at D-Link isn't the brightest. Sad, because the camera hardware is quite nice.