I downloaded the image file and here is a tip to avoid to burn it, thanks to Linux.
With fdisk, we can get the organisation of the partitions in the image:
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$ fdisk -l stereopi-0-2-3.img
Disk stereopi-0-2-3.img: 1.9 GiB, 2013265920 bytes, 3932160 sectors
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: dos
Disk identifier: 0xb41d5468
Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type
stereopi-0-2-3.img1 8192 98045 89854 43.9M c W95 FAT32 (LBA)
stereopi-0-2-3.img2 98304 3932159 3833856 1.8G 83 Linux
Now, mount the partition as this (after having created an empty /tmp/stereopi_fat/ directory):
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sudo mount -o loop,offset=4194304 stereopi-0-2-3.img /tmp/stereopi_fat/
Linux is fantastic.
You can unmount as usual:
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sudo umount /tmp/stereopi_fat/
By the way, here is the default configuration stereopi.conf I searched for:
video_width=1280
video_mode=3D
video_height=720
video_fps=30
video_bitrate=3000000
video_profile=baseline
rtmp_url=
rtmp_enabled=0
mpegts_clients=192.168.1.10:3001
mpegts_enabled=0
rtsp_enabled=0
usb_enabled=1
audio_enabled=0
video_wb=auto
exposure=auto
contrast=-15
sharpness=0
digitalgain=0.0
wifi_iface=
wifi_ssid=
wifi_psk=
record_enabled=0
record_time=300
dec_enabled=0
up_down=0
udp_clients=192.168.1.10:3000
udp_enabled=0
ws_enabled=0