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Blog entry by Lucinda Lin

Business Applications for AJP Files Using FileViewPro

Business Applications for AJP Files Using FileViewPro

An AJP file ending in .ajp can serve different roles based on the source, usually showing up as a CCTV/DVR backup where the device saves video in a proprietary container that VLC or WMP can’t play, generated after selecting a camera and date/time for export to USB/CD/DVD, and typically relying on a companion viewer such as a Backup Player or AJP Player to view and sometimes convert the footage.

If the file wasn’t generated by a camera system, an AJP may belong to older software like Anfy Applet Generator or show up in CAD/CAM workflows such as Alphacam and therefore isn’t video, and you can usually tell which type you have by comparing file size and companion files—CCTV exports are often hundreds of MB or more and may include viewer programs, while project-style AJP files are compact and appear with web or CAD assets, and checking Properties or opening it in a text editor briefly can show readable text for project files versus gibberish-like binary for DVR footage.

To open an .AJP file, you need a method that reflects how it was generated, since Windows and typical video software won’t recognize it, and if it’s a CCTV/DVR export, your best bet is the viewer/player supplied with the footage—often located in the same folder and named something like Player.exe or BackupPlayer. If you loved this write-up and you would certainly like to obtain more facts concerning easy AJP file viewer kindly go to the web-site. exe—which you can launch to load the AJP and then use its built-in export/convert tools to save out an MP4 or AVI.

If nothing came with the AJP file, your best move is to find out the DVR/NVR brand or the software normally used for live viewing, then install the vendor’s official CMS/VMS/backup player, because many systems only decode AJP through their own client; after installation, open that client manually and use its Open/Playback/Local File function to load the AJP, and if playback works but export is unavailable, the last workaround is a full-screen screen recording, which is time-consuming but sometimes unavoidable.

If the AJP file doesn’t trace back to a DVR, it may represent older animation/app-creation tools or CAD/CAM workflows, requiring the same program that made it, so look around its folder for identifying app names, documentation, or related file types like DXF/DWG, then open it inside the correct software, noting that file size can guide you—tiny files usually mean project/config content, while huge ones are often CCTV backups.

If you prefer, you can give me the file size along with names of nearby files or a screenshot, and I can almost always identify the correct type and advise which playback tool will open it.

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