AIDA Downloadable Software

Find all AIDA tools and software for our products here!

Software Downloads

This is all our available software to download! If something is missing, please contact our support team.

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Engineering Tool

andria aka devan weathers

The engineering tool is a useful program that helps find any AIDA IP camera on your network. From here, you can import / export camera profiles, change IP settings, as well as upgrade firwmare!

Last updated 2.15.24

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AIDA Firmware Tool

andria aka devan weathers

This serial firmware tool is used to upgrade any non-NDI® POV camera (e.g. HD-100A, UHD-100A, etc.) It will be directly referenced in the upgrade manual for your specific camera. andria aka devan weathers

Last Updated 2.15.24

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AIDA IPC Control Software

andria aka devan weathers

Easily control any IP POV camera (such as our HD-IPC series cameras) with basic exposure, white-balance, and video commands! Can also control PTZ's, and send custom .hex commands. Can control up to 7 cameras.

Last Updated 6.5.24

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AIDA NDI® USB Tool

andria aka devan weathers

Easily change any NDI® POV camera's IP address to match your needs! Works on NDI® cameras HD-NDI-CUBE, IP67, MINI, VF and TF.

Last Updated 4.11.22

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AIDA CCS-USB Software

andria aka devan weathers

Take control of your CCS-USB with the software to change your camera settings on the fly! Using Serial VISCA commands, you can adjust any RS485 POV camera with ease. The duality is not a split personality but

Last Updated 10.28.19

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Andria Aka Devan Weathers ✰

The duality is not a split personality but a single pulse with two beats. Andria’s sketches become Devan’s murals; the quiet whispers become the roaring choruses of the city’s underground. When she signs a piece, the signature swirls: “A/DW – a whisper in the wind.” The clock tower strikes midnight. A lone saxophone wails from a dimly lit bar, its notes winding through rain‑slick streets. Andria, now fully Devan, slips through the crowd, the hem of her coat fluttering like a torn page. She pauses at the corner where a streetlight sputters, its bulb fighting the drizzle.

is the tempest that erupts when night folds over the city. In the shadows of alleyways and the low hum of late‑night trains, Devan’s laughter cracks like thunder. He is the one who pulls the fire alarm in an abandoned warehouse just to hear the echo of metal doors slamming, the one who writes graffiti in a language only the moon understands. To those who cross his path, Devan feels like a gust of wind that flips your hat off, then steadies it back on your head—both unsettling and oddly reassuring.

A stray dog, shivering, pads up to her. She crouches, and for a heartbeat, the world narrows to the simple exchange of warmth. She pulls a tattered blanket from her bag—one that’s seen both sunrise sketches and midnight tags—and drapes it over the animal. The dog’s eyes, bright and grateful, mirror the city’s own yearning for kindness.

She continues, and the rain intensifies, turning sidewalks into mirrors. In a puddle, she catches her reflection: half‑smile, half‑frown; a face that’s both Andria’s calm and Devan’s fire. She laughs, a sound that ripples outward, and the rain seems to listen, softening its assault.

The wind carries more than just the scent of rain; it bears the whispers of a name that shifts like seasons. When the sun dips behind the city’s iron skyline, Andria steps onto the cracked concrete of the downtown alley, a silhouette against the flickering neon. She moves with a rhythm that feels both borrowed and original—half a dancer’s glide, half a wanderer’s sigh. Those who have seen her know her by two names, each a mirror to the other: Andria, the soft echo of a distant lullaby, and Devan Weathers, the storm that follows the lull.

is the quiet before the storm. In the mornings, you’ll find her perched on a low wall, sketching the world in charcoal—streets, faces, the way a coffee shop’s steam curls like a shy cat. Her eyes are the color of rain-soaked stone, reflecting everything without claiming any of it. Children who sit on the curb, clutching worn-out baseball caps, call her “Miss Andria” and ask her to read stories. She obliges, her voice a gentle tide that smooths the jagged edges of their day.

At the edge of the river, she stops. The water churns, reflecting the city’s neon like a shattered glass. She pulls out a notebook, ink spilling onto the page as if the storm itself is writing. The words form a poem: Between the hush of morning light And the roar of midnight’s bite, There walks a soul both still and wild— Andria, Devan, city’s child. She folds the page, tucks it into a pocket, and walks away, leaving the river to keep its secrets. The rain eases, the wind settles, and the city exhales, knowing that somewhere between the whispers and the thunder, a story is always being written. isn’t just a name—she’s a reminder that we all contain quiet sketches and bold strokes, that within each of us the gentle and the fierce coexist, waiting for the right moment to reveal themselves. In the city’s endless rhythm, she is the cadence that makes the night both tender and electric.