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Live Netsnap Cam Server Feed Link May 2026

| Feed Type | Format Example | Best For | Latency | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | http://192.168.1.10/netsnap.cgi?stream=0 | Web browsers (no plugins) | High (200-500ms) | | RTSP | rtsp://192.168.1.10:554/live/ch0 | VLC, Blue Iris, ONVIF apps | Low (50-150ms) | | HLS | http://server.com/live/stream.m3u8 | Mobile & adaptive streaming | Medium (3-10s delay) |

server listen 8080; location / auth_basic "Restricted"; auth_basic_user_file /etc/nginx/.htpasswd; alias /tmp/; location /live.mjpeg add_header Cache-Control no-cache; add_header Content-Type multipart/x-mixed-replace;boundary=--myboundary; live netsnap cam server feed link

After restarting nginx, your live Netsnap cam server feed link for local access would be: http://username:password@192.168.1.100:8080/live.mjpeg | Feed Type | Format Example | Best

For remote access (use with extreme caution), you would set up port forwarding on your router (e.g., forward WAN port 8080 to 192.168.1.100:8080) and the link becomes: http://your-public-ip:8080/live.mjpeg Once you have the feed link, you can access it in multiple ways: Option A: Direct Browser View Enter the link into Chrome, Firefox, or Safari. For MJPEG links, the browser will show a refreshing image. For RTSP, you’ll need an extension like "VLC Web Plugin." Option B: VLC Media Player Open VLC → Media → Open Network Stream → Paste your feed link (e.g., rtsp://192.168.1.10:554/live/ch0 ). VLC can also view MJPEG links via HTTP. Option C: Embedding in a Website Use an HTML <img> tag for MJPEG feeds (though modern browsers may limit refreshing). Better: use JavaScript to refresh the image source. VLC can also view MJPEG links via HTTP