- If you prefer to use Google Chrome, follow this guide to see how to use Internet Explorer as a separate window within Google Chrome. Before you begin. You will need a Hikvision recorder or camera that is set up and connected to your internet router. You will also need a Windows computer connected to the same internet router. Let’s get started.
- The Ultimate Security Camera Guide V1The Ultimate Security Camera Guide V2The Ultimate Security C.
- Milestone & Hikvision Plugin 1.0.5.6 Software Description: Plugins for Milestone XProtect Version 1.0.5.6 Software.
- This is the web plugin for Mac OS. After installation, you will be able to live view most of Hikvision DVR/IPC/Encoder on Safari for Mac. 1 Version: V3.0.6.23 build20180123 2 Support Mac OS.
UPDATE: Hikvision firmware releases (NVR: 4.22.00 / Camera: 5.6.0) now supports a native plugin which allows for video viewing in Chrome and Firefox browsers. Hikvision's current use of NPAPI plugin for web browsers to display video no longer works in Google Chrome v45 (since September 2015) and in Firefox v52.0 released 7th march 2017. This means users will no longer be able to successfully.
Hikvision Plugin Chrome
© Westend61/Getty Images© Westend61/Getty Images
- To enable Flash in Google Chrome, you'll need to manually allow it for every site you visit, or set it to 'Ask First' mode.
- Google Chrome automatically blocks Flash from running on every new site you visit, and will continue to do this until 2021.
- On December 31, 2020, Google Chrome will stop supporting Flash for good, and you'll have to use an older browser if you want to run Flash.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Adobe Flash Player is going the way of the dodo. At the end of 2020, not only will most major web browsers no longer allow Flash, but Adobe itself will stop supporting the multimedia software.
Flash Player was once the foundation of the internet. Animations, browser games, advertisements, and even YouTube videos all once ran using Flash.
However, as the years went on, Flash began to fall out of favor.
The beginning of the end was when Google declared that Google Chrome would begin to block Flash by default on any page you visit on the web. This declaration is also probably the reason you're here.
Once 2021 hits, you won't be able to run Flash in Google Chrome at all. Until then, however, you can re-enable Flash by going through Chrome's Settings menu.
Here's how to do it in two ways, using the official Google Chrome app for Mac and PC.
Check out the products mentioned in this article:MacBook Pro (From $1,299.99 at Best Buy) Microsoft Surface Pro 7 (From $699.99 at Best Buy) How to enable Flash in Google ChromeThere are two ways to enable Flash in Google Chrome. You can enable it once for a single site, or set Google Chrome to automatically ask you if you want to run Flash.
To allow Flash for a single website:1. Go to the website that you want to use.
2. When you see the 'Plugin Blocked' icon pop up at the right side of your search bar, click the lock button on the left side.
3. In the pop-up window that appears, you'll see an option labeled 'Site settings.' Click it.
4. In the menu that appears, scroll down until you find 'Flash' with a drop-down menu next to it. Click the drop down and change 'Block (default)' to 'Allow.'
© William Antonelli/Business Insider
Return to the page where Flash was blocked and refresh. It should now allow you to run Flash.
Google Chrome doesn't allow you to always run Flash by default anymore, as a way of protecting your computer from viruses that run through Flash.
However, you can set Chrome to automatically ask you whether you want to run Flash whenever you encounter a page that has it. Here's how to do that.
To make Google Chrome ask you to use Flash:1. Go to the page you want to use that runs Flash.
2. Click the plugin blocked icon at the right side of your search bar.
3. In the pop-up window, click 'Manage.' This will take you to the Flash section of Chrome's settings.
© MS Paint Adventures/William Antonelli/Business Insider
4. There's a switch at the top labeled 'Block sites from running Flash (recommended).' Toggle the switch to the on position to change it to 'Ask first.'
Hikvision Plugin Download
© William Antonelli/Business Insider
Sites that use Flash will now automatically ask to run the software, until the end of 2020.
Related coverage from How To Do Everything: Tech:© Westend61/Getty Images© Westend61/Getty Images
- To enable Flash in Google Chrome, you'll need to manually allow it for every site you visit, or set it to 'Ask First' mode.
- Google Chrome automatically blocks Flash from running on every new site you visit, and will continue to do this until 2021.
- On December 31, 2020, Google Chrome will stop supporting Flash for good, and you'll have to use an older browser if you want to run Flash.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Adobe Flash Player is going the way of the dodo. At the end of 2020, not only will most major web browsers no longer allow Flash, but Adobe itself will stop supporting the multimedia software.
Flash Player was once the foundation of the internet. Animations, browser games, advertisements, and even YouTube videos all once ran using Flash.
However, as the years went on, Flash began to fall out of favor.
The beginning of the end was when Google declared that Google Chrome would begin to block Flash by default on any page you visit on the web. This declaration is also probably the reason you're here.
Once 2021 hits, you won't be able to run Flash in Google Chrome at all. Until then, however, you can re-enable Flash by going through Chrome's Settings menu.
Here's how to do it in two ways, using the official Google Chrome app for Mac and PC.
Check out the products mentioned in this article:MacBook Pro (From $1,299.99 at Best Buy) Microsoft Surface Pro 7 (From $699.99 at Best Buy) How to enable Flash in Google ChromeThere are two ways to enable Flash in Google Chrome. You can enable it once for a single site, or set Google Chrome to automatically ask you if you want to run Flash.
To allow Flash for a single website:
1. Go to the website that you want to use.
2. When you see the 'Plugin Blocked' icon pop up at the right side of your search bar, click the lock button on the left side.
3. In the pop-up window that appears, you'll see an option labeled 'Site settings.' Click it.
4. In the menu that appears, scroll down until you find 'Flash' with a drop-down menu next to it. Click the drop down and change 'Block (default)' to 'Allow.'
© William Antonelli/Business Insider
Return to the page where Flash was blocked and refresh. It should now allow you to run Flash.

Google Chrome doesn't allow you to always run Flash by default anymore, as a way of protecting your computer from viruses that run through Flash.
However, you can set Chrome to automatically ask you whether you want to run Flash whenever you encounter a page that has it. Here's how to do that.
To make Google Chrome ask you to use Flash:1. Go to the page you want to use that runs Flash.
2. Click the plugin blocked icon at the right side of your search bar.
3. In the pop-up window, click 'Manage.' This will take you to the Flash section of Chrome's settings.
© MS Paint Adventures/William Antonelli/Business Insider
Hikvision Plugin For Google Chrome Mac Os

4. There's a switch at the top labeled 'Block sites from running Flash (recommended).' Toggle the switch to the on position to change it to 'Ask first.'
© William Antonelli/Business Insider
Sites that use Flash will now automatically ask to run the software, until the end of 2020.
Related coverage from How To Do Everything: Tech: