In fact there was a recent change. They are going to start posting release notes for the web portal now:
What kind of Internet ISP, bandwidth (Upload and Download), and Router are you using?
I have 6 Floodlight Pros and I can stream all of them at the same time on Chrome:
To be fair, the one in the bottom middle is in the farthest corner of my property, and sometimes has a weak signal, so it will occasionally go in and out, but all the others are pretty solid.
I’m usually streaming 9 cameras at a time = 3-4 FLPros, then a few other cams depending on the time of day and situation (V2’s, V3’s, V3 Pros, etc.) My Floodlight Pros are the most stable of all cameras. The Floodlight Pros will stay streaming for more than a day straight, while sometimes the others have occasional disconnect issues that require reconnecting after a while of streaming, especially the V2’s are really bad with connection issues on this.
I just pulled mine up again and they’ve been streaming fine for 20 minutes straight without problems. I don’t notice any change.
It’s probably painful to hear that other people have FLPros streaming perfectly for more than a day straight when yours aren’t. It would be nice to figure out what the difference is so you, and others, can get them all working well too. That’s why I was wondering what your bandwidth is, because while the app will stream video locally and not use the internet if you’re at home, this web portal DOES use the internet every time, both up and download, so that could affect some peoples’ experience. Also, routers and how many devices are connected to it can make a big difference as the stock routers that come from an ISP are usually complete junk that barely handle a couple of devices very well. ISP and type of connection can also make a big difference…cable companies like to daisy-chain their bandwidth with the whole neighborhood or city, for example and do weird things with the sharing that can cause chaos with devices that need a consistent live stream since they can’t “buffer” realtime and wait in lines like other devices such as TV streaming. There are a dozen or more other factors that could explain why it’s different. Just curious if any of those main culprits could be the explanation in this case.