ADVITRONICS

Advitronics is a manufacturer of communication and nurse call systems, with some products including IP video monitoring features. Their solutions are often used in healthcare facilities, retirement homes, and clinics, where reliability and compliance with data privacy regulations are essential. How to connect to Advitronics IP cameras?

Connecting to your Advitronics IP camera

Advitronics IP camera connection options:
Try the following rtsp connection options in SmartVision to connect to Advitronics.

Default IP Address: 192.168.1.188
Default username: admin
Default password: admin

Default RTSP address :
rtsp://admin:admin@192.168.1.188:554

The connection details provided here are community-sourced, may be incomplete, and are offered without any warranties of reliability. For How to Reset IP Camera to default factory settings please click here.

Advitronics IP camera

Initial setup of IP cameras starts by isolating the device from the main network and connecting it to a separate segment or directly to a laptop to avoid IP conflicts and prevent accidental external access. Identify the factory IP address and default credentials and change them right away. In large systems the same password can be used within an isolated subnet for easier management, but different passwords should be set for remote access.

RTSP Address of Advitronics IP camera

RTSP is a standard protocol for streaming video and audio over a network. It lets the camera connect to a recorder or software without vendor apps. The URL usually looks like rtsp://login:password@IP:554/path_to_stream. You can find it in the documentation, the web interface, or with SmartVision or ONVIF Device Manager.







ONVIF vs RTSP: What’s the Difference?

People often confuse ONVIF with video streaming — but ONVIF doesn’t transmit video at all.

Advitronics compatible software

Assign a static IP address from a dedicated range, place cameras in a separate VLAN, and block direct Internet access if cloud features are not used. Use SmartVison to find Advitronics IP camera on network. Disable UPnP, DDNS, auto-updates, and any unused protocols for security reason. If the camera does not support RTSP, check if you can enable it in settings. Try HTTP streaming if supported. If not, replace the camera with a model that supports RTSP or ONVIF.

SmartVision

SmartVision is a powerful Windows video surveillance software supporting IP cameras, continuous video recording. View and manage all your devices with Windows IP camera viewer offering flexible layouts and real-time monitoring.
Features include motion and object detection, face and license plate recognition, audio-only recording from IP cameras with automatic speech recognition in over 100 languages, cloud integration.
What Users Are Saying About SmartVision
SmartVision brings simplicity and intelligence to security with its AI-powered VMS. It’s easy to use, provides real-time motion detection, and gives you remote access to your cameras. Here’s what users are saying:
  • SmartVision is a game changer for anyone who needs a reliable video surveillance system. I used to struggle with finding a good, affordable solution for my business. But with SmartVision, everything works seamlessly. The AI-powered software automatically detects relevant events and objects, which eliminates the frustration of sifting through hours of irrelevant footage. It's like having an extra set of eyes that only alerts you when something important happens.
    Louis Alexander
  • SmartVision has also helped me avoid the security vulnerabilities that I used to deal with in previous systems. As someone who values privacy and security, I appreciate how SmartVision protects my footage with end-to-end encryption and secure cloud storage. The system uses a unique security protocol that protects my cameras from external hacks, which was a constant worry with older systems that required me to expose my IP addresses to the public internet. The fact that SmartVision handles everything with secure cloud connections means that I can rest easy knowing my surveillance data is safe.
    Jason Walker