For About 75 More - Viewerframe Mode Intitle Axis 2400 Video Server

To explore Viewerframe mode and other settings, you must access the Axis 2400 web interface.

Modern browsers block ActiveX and NPAPI plugins. You may need to use Pale Moon or an older Firefox/IE in a VM.

The Axis 2400 has very limited resources (100 MHz CPU, 32 MB RAM). To support many viewers, you must configure it correctly. To explore Viewerframe mode and other settings, you

The Axis 2400 Video Server was a groundbreaking device in the early 2000s. It allowed analog CCTV cameras to be converted into IP-based network cameras. With one BNC input and one audio input, it supported Motion JPEG video streaming over TCP/IP networks. Its key selling point was the ability to control PTZ (Pan-Tilt-Zoom) cameras via serial RS-232/RS-485 and to integrate with Axis’ powerful API.

Today, while largely obsolete, the Axis 2400 is still found in legacy surveillance systems. Understanding its Viewerframe mode is critical for administrators maintaining old installations. http://192


http://192.168.0.90/axis-cgi/jpg/image.cgi?camera=1&resolution=640x480

Combine with refresh=75 (milliseconds) to simulate a slow slideshow.

For advanced users, you can set Viewerframe mode directly using HTTP GET requests: Combine with refresh=75 (milliseconds) to simulate a slow

Use:

http://<IP>/axis-cgi/mjpg/video.cgi?viewerframe=1

You’ll see a new JPEG only when you refresh manually.