First off, I'm going to try to remain as civil as I can on this forum as I am, in reality, looking for help.
I bought a DCS-920 to use as a nanny cam as I think bad things are happening in my home when I'm not around. The package I picked up shipped with D-viewcam 2.0.3. I set everything up and started recording.
First off, the positive:
- The camera itself was easy to set up and hide.
- Video quality is what you would expect.
- The software seemed fairly simply to use.
The issues:
- Exporting scheduled video simply does not work. I have used all 3 codecs that it came with and end up with a 0 byte file. After reading up on the subject, I decided to upgrade to d-viewcam 2.0.4 and still experience the same issue. No progress bar, but it does replay the video from the cue in to the cue out very rapidly.
- I followed another piece of advice to try to record manually. I took a one minute video and exported it just fine (it did have the progress bar, but did not play back the video while exporting). So I decided to start the recording when I left for work and then stop it when I got home. I ended up with an error "Manual recording was full, Manual recording will be stopped."
I immediately checked into this. and found that...
- I still had 11 Gb of free space on my 40Gb drive.
- The manual recording split the video files into 15 minute chunks instead of the 1 hour chunks.
I wasn't too worried about it thinking that it was out of space as I had about 10 hours of video which was a little more than I need.
While using 2.0.3, I only did scheduled recordings. When I got a day's worth, I would copy/paste/delete over the network so I could actually check out/export (just a little processor intensive).
Today I had 29Gb of free space when I clicked the manual record button and received the same error as before about manual recording being full. I received the same error after a reboot as well.
Seriously, do I
have to use the backup function for it to know that I have freed up disk space? Or is there something else going on?
Also, it took about 2 hours to encode/export a 15 minute chunk of video using the cinepac codec at quality of 50.