File Player [top] — Uvrd
| Tool | Platform | Notes | |------|----------|-------| | (UR’s official simulator) | Windows/Linux | Native playback under “Simulation → Load recording” | | UR Polyscope (on real robot) | UR e‑series/CB3 | Can load UVRD files from USB (limited) | | UR+ Visualization Tools | Varies | Some third‑party apps (e.g., RobotView) support UVRD | | Custom Python player | Cross‑platform | Using ur_rtde or urdfpy + parsing the binary format |
#TechTips #Security #CCTV
Unlike standard video, which records at a constant or variable frame rate, UVRD is designed for . A standard camera records 30 frames per second regardless of whether anything is happening. A UVRD recording, however, might record at 1 frame per second (FPS) during an empty hallway scene, but instantly spike to 120 FPS when motion is detected, all within a single file. uvrd file player
In the world of high-definition video surveillance, IP cameras, and forensic analysis, file formats often become the unsung heroes—or the biggest headaches—of the workflow. One such specialized format is the . If you have downloaded a video from a security system or a network video recorder (NVR) and found a file ending in .uvrd , you know the immediate frustration: standard media players like VLC or Windows Media Player refuse to open it. | Tool | Platform | Notes | |------|----------|-------|
The ability to toggle on-screen data displays that correspond to the exact millisecond of the footage. In the world of high-definition video surveillance, IP