First, my hat's off to the development team on this product. I'm ready to purchase a 32 camera license for this and so far my simple trial testing has it connecting to my remote IP AXIS cameras with MJPG video with no problems at all. I've been using iSpyConnect for a number of years but that is the most unstable product I've ever seen, Windows only and just horrible generally. This one looks like the business!
Having said that, I realize that there is a server & client component. My ultimate goal here is to install the server on CentOS 6 on a KVM install and to have multiple clients (probably running on Ubuntu 16.04 MATE 64 bit edition) that I can deploy throughout the organization here. Is that possible? My test install was on Linux Mint 13 locally and that went fine. I would just prefer to virtualize the server and then have the clients installed on raw machines (ideally Raspberry Pi 3 machines, but I can do small Intel boxes also). The clients will feed NVIDIA cards with 1920x1200 resolution monitors on them. My main goal is to just have an active grid showing at various locations in the office so that general motion can be viewed by multiple personnel as needed, but that all video activity (by way of motion detection) can be stored to our NAS server and then rsync'd to offsite storage periodically.
I've glanced through the forums here and all of this seems possible. If so, this is probably the only solution I have found that is sophisticated enough to keep up with this. Most of the others are cheesy free programs you get when you buy some crap IP cameras from China. This looks like it might actually work in a professional setting.
If anyone has any thoughts or could chime in on my plans here, it would be much appreciated.
Thanks
K