
Q-See CCTV replacement
I have a self-installed security system by Q-See from 2012-eight QCN8093B cameras with motion detection, night vision, playback, and so on. Q-See went under during Covid, and although my system works, I would like to plan for when the computer system that came with it dies. The cameras are POE, and the computer is a proprietary system with 8TB of Western Digital HD storage.
I could build a new system, but I don't know where to start. I haven't found software that seems to be able to collect data from multiple security cameras to do what this system does. Any ideas? I am not afraid to build a new computer if that's what it takes, I just don't know where to go for software. Dorothy Meister
THE DOCTOR RESPONDS: The Q-See brand was resurrected in 2022 as Qsee, but the new company has made it clear that it won't support legacy products, which is why Dorothy has this issue. Her decision to act must have been caused by a premonition, because between contacting the Doc and responding to his queries, one of the drives had died.
The system runs two hard drives, so while she waits for a replacement, she is at least able to continue using it. The Doc's hunch is that the system will work for many years yet-way beyond the life of the drives-but it's still an idea to plan ahead.
Many Q-See models were based on OEM Dahua kit, which bodes well for cannibalizing them in a different system as they're likely to support the ONVIF protocol; however, they're likely to need a fair bit of setting up-including a full hardware reset. One excellent online resource is IPcamtalk. In particular, follow the thread at https:// ipcamtalk.com/threads/qsee-cam-issue.62551, which covers the specifics of Dorothy's exact model.
This story is from the February 2025 edition of Maximum PC.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 2025 edition of Maximum PC.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

Velocity Micro Raptor ES40
A compact PC that mixes it with the big boys

Intel Arc B580
Intel's second crack at the gaming GPU market

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle
Dr Jones will steal your heart in MachineGames' best effort to date

Improve your memory with Windows Recall
SINCE ITS ANNOUNCEMENT at Microsoft's Build conference in May 2024, Recall has had a torrid time.

HAVE WE REACHED MAXIMUM PC?
Has the desktop reached the point where it can get no better? Ian Evenden looks ahead

THE EVOLUTION OF VIDEO GAME AI
Over time, game AI has become more refined.

X (formerly Twitter) vs Bluesky
The battle of the micro-bloggers

Fun and graphics card games at CES 2025
WE ALL KNEW what was coming at CES: a bunch of graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia. They were pretty much exactly as predicted, albeit with some surprises. AMD managed to botch the launch of its RDNA 4 cards, while Nvidia played 3D chess with the pricing of its new RTX 50 cards.

AMD UNVEILS NEW GAMING AND AI CHIPS
AMD Ryzen AI Max series announced at CES 2025