Reolink Go 4G LTE security camera review

REVIEW – I currently have five wireless cameras set up inside my home so that I can keep an eye on my house when I’m not there. But you’ll notice that I said the cameras were all inside the house. I’d love to have several cameras outside the house too, but running power cables, and/or network cables to various locations isn’t something I want to do. That’s why I was excited for the opportunity to review the 100% wireless Go camera from Reolink. Let’s take a look.

What is it?

The Reolink Go is a security camera that uses 4G LTE and 3G for communication and a solar panel to keep it powered. Other than the cable that runs from the solar panel to the camera, the Go camera is 100% wireless.

Hardware specs

Video Resolution 1080p HD at 15 frames/sec
Video Format H.264
Field of View Fixed lens, 110° diagonal
Night Vision Up to 10 m (33 ft)
Digital Zoom 6x digital zoom
Audio High-quality speaker and microphone
Frequency Bands Europe: LTE FDD: B1/B3/B5/B7/B8/B20, WCDMA: B1/B5/B8
Frequency Bands in the United States: LTE FDD: B2/B4/B12, WCDMA: B2/B4/B5
Battery 7800mAh rechargeable battery
Solar Can be powered by Reolink Solar Panel
DC Power Can be powered by 5V/2A power adaptor
Storage Local Storage Supports up to 64GB micro SD card
Working Environment Operating Temperature -10° to 55° C (14° to 131° F)
Weather Resistance IP65 certified weatherproof

What’s in the box?

  • Reolink Go camera
  • Battery
  • Weatherproof jacket
  • Adjustable mounting bracket
  • Bracket hardware
  • micro USB cable

Design and features

The Reolink Go is a security camera that’s shaped a bit like a bullet. It has a white and grey plastic housing with the Reolink logo in blue.

The lens is on the front of the camera and there is a large motion sensor below it with night vision IR sensors, and a status LED.

The “butt” of the camera has a threaded socket for the included mounting bracket.

The back (butt) of the camera twists off to reveal a large battery compartment along with a SIM card slot and a micro SD card slot.

The camera ships with a battery that slides into the camera. Just make sure you pay attention and orient the arrow on the battery compartment with the arrow on the battery before you try to push the battery in place. I say this from experience because I didn’t do this the first time and had a heck of a time removing the battery so I could insert it correctly (facepalm). Anyway, no harm was done… but lesson learned to pay more attention.

You’ll also want to insert your SIM card and micro SD card in their respective slots before you insert the battery. It should go without saying that a SIM card and a micro SD card is not included with the camera.

With the battery and cards in place, you should then put the weatherproof jacket on the camera. This will protect the camera from the weather but it’s kind of a pain to put it on and line up the hole for the mounting bracket.

Before you set up the camera outdoors, you should charge the battery by using a micro USB cable and a port on your computer or a USB AC adapter (not included).

Reolink also sent me their optional solar panel which will charge the Go’s battery from sunlight. The panel has a micro USB cable that plugs into the port on the bottom of the camera and has a protective sleeve that slides in place to keep the connection waterproof.

With the battery charged, cards inserted, and the mounting bracket attached, you can set up the camera outdoors and you’ll be ready to go.

I tested the Reolink Go in several places around the outside of my house. You can see that I’m a real DIYer with a complete with rock stabilization system. 😉

It should go without saying that it’s important that the location where you plan to install the camera has a good 4G or 3G signal. It’s also important to note that the Reolink Go camera does NOT work through WiFi. It only uses cellular. Here in the US, it only works with carriers that use T-Mobile like Freedompop, US Mobile, Ting, Cricket, Mint, Metro PCS, and Tracfone. I bought a pre-paid Mint SIM to test with this camera. Mint also uses T-Mobile. When I bought it, they were having a deal for $20 for 3 months of 5GB of data per month. I had to activate the SIM in a phone first, but then it worked perfectly in the camera.

Reolink app

To view the camera’s live footage, you have to use the Reolink app for iOS or Android. I installed the app on my Pixel 2 XL.


The application is pretty easy to navigate. There’s the main screen that shows a thumbnail image of the camera with status icons for the 4G signal and battery level for the camera.

Tapping the camera thumbnail image takes you to the live view for that camera. This screen allows you to pause the camera, take a snapshot, record video, change from 1080P to Fluent resolution, color to black and white, and go full screen with the live view.




You can also listen to the built-in speaker, have a two-way conversation, and go into the playback/motion clip screen.

I was impressed with the image quality during the day and at night. As you can see from the images, the picture is sharp and clear.


When the camera detects motion using PIR (thermal motion sensing), it will send a push notification to your phone like you see above on the left. You can then go into the playback screen and view the captured clips. Note that the camera does not record video 27/4 even with a micro SD card installed. It just copies the motion clips to the card.

What I like

  • Good image quality
  • 4G capability
  • Can be used outdoors with a solar panel for complete wireless installation

What needs to be improved

  • Only works with T-mobile carriers
  • Needs WiFi capability in addition to cellular
  • Does not record all footage to micro SD card, only motion alert clips are saved
  • Expensive

Final thoughts

I reviewed the Reolink Argus Pro camera a couple months ago and my experience with the Reolink Go compared to the Argus Pro has been the same except that the Go camera uses 4G instead of WiFi. The ability to place the Reolink Go camera anywhere there is a cell signal for the carrier you’re using with it is a game changer. I have considered putting one in my mailbox and mounting the solar panel on the back of the box so that I’ll know when the mail person brings the mail since our mailbox is more than 500 feet away and completely out of sight. So far I’ve just used the camera around my house. Even with heavy rain and cold temperatures down in the 20’s, it’s been working like a champ although some mornings the picture has been a little foggy.

This camera is expensive at $275 for the camera with the solar panel. At that price, I think it should also include WiFi capability and record all footage to the micro SD card. Even without those features, this camera is useful for people who need to keep an eye on their property and don’t want to deal with running cables for networking and power. But obviously, the wireless cellular convenience comes with a price tag.

Price: $249.99 (1 camera), $274.98 (1 camera + solar panel)
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample for this review was provided by Reolink.

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Reolink Go 4G LTE security camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 6, 2019 at 9:00 am.

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Pandora now offers offline playback for Apple Watch

NEWS – With the latest update to Pandora’s mobile app, all Apple Watch users running WatchOS 5.0 or later can enable offline playback for paid subscriptions. Users with paid subscriptions to Pandora Plus or Pandora Premium — $5 and $10 per month, respectively — can now automatically sync music for offline play when in close proximity to their Watch.

According to Pandora’s app description, “we bring you a brand new, built-from-the-ground-up app that’s seamlessly integrated into the Apple Watch experience.” The Pandora app also claims better integration with the Watch interface, utilizing the larger faces of the Apple Watch 4.

Much like Apple’s own Music app, paid Pandora users can simply play downloaded music directly from their Apple Watch. I couldn’t find exactly how much music is stored on the watch, but I assume it’s more than enough for a nice long run.

As a Spotify subscriber, this is something I’ve been longing for on my own Watch for some time. I’d love to be able to head out for a walk or run and listen to music without my iPhone jangling around in my pocket. It’s somewhat disappointing for me to see Pandora beat Spotify to the punch on this, but it’s great news for their subscribers.

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Pandora now offers offline playback for Apple Watch originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 6, 2019 at 8:00 am.

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Top posts of 2018, beehives in your house, backpack reviews, and more – Weekly roundup

NEWS – Happy first Saturday of 2019! If you’ve been around here for a while, you’ll know that every Saturday night I post an easy to read listing of all the news, reviews, and articles that we published in the last seven days. Take a quick look to make sure you didn’t miss something.

ARTICLES

REVIEWS

NEWS

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Top posts of 2018, beehives in your house, backpack reviews, and more – Weekly roundup originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 5, 2019 at 5:25 pm.

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Audeara A-01 Wireless Headphones review

REVIEW – Over-ear headphones have always been my favorite go to for immersive listening. Audeara reached out about reviewing their A-01 headphones and since I’ve been traveling quite a bit for my day job, the timing turned out perfect. A good set of noise-cancelling headphones are a must-have for long flights to help reduce fatigue or even just to be able to enjoy media in-between fitful bouts of sleep. The A-01s have a key feature for customizing the sound profile unique to your own hearing. Seeing as I turned half-ninety a couple of years ago and have been increasingly concerned that my hearing is not what it used to be, that was a feature I was most excited to check out.

What is it?

The A-01s are over-ear headphones that support both Bluetooth, 3.5 cable connections, active noise cancellation, and sound profile customization.

Hardware specs

• Connectivity: Bluetooth and 3.5mm wired
• Range: ≤10m (BT)
• ANC: Active Noise Cancellation
• Listening Time: ≤65 hours
• Drivers: 40mm Mylar
• Freq. Response: 20Hz-22kHz
• Impedance: 32 Ohm
• Charging: MicroUSB

What’s in the box?

• A-01 Headphones
• Charging cable – Micro USB to USB-A
• 3.5mm audio cable with microphone and single multi-function button
• Airline audio adapter
• 1/4 Phono plug adapter
• Microfiber pouch for cables and accessories
• Molded travel case
• Quickstart guide

Design and features

The overall design of the A-01s is a clean, traditional take on over-ear headphones. They’re a glorious matte black with understated graphics that are hard to object to. They are slightly heavier than I was expecting, but very much a positive as the construction is largely aluminum and feels very solid. Nothing about them feels cheap.

All the accessories are a notch up from what’s typically included with metal housings on the cables and tasteful Audeara branding across most of them. The molded EVA case holds all of it in a compact, fit-in-your-pack form.

From a fit perspective, the ear cups pivot 90º inward just above the yokes which provide about 30º of vertical rotation to seal against your head very well. The clamping force of headphones are directly related to their weight and nailing that balance can be pretty tricky. Audeara opted to have the headband extend further out from the head to help strike that ratio. I think they got it right, but it does stick out a bit as you can see in this photo.

The headband is a very soft synthetic leather (guessing) with a subtly debossed Audeara logo and a padded air mesh that rests against your head.

The sizing adjustment uses a friction slide with detents for positioning. The detents are not super positive, but they also do not slip once set.

The ear cups are comfortable foam wrapped with a soft synthetic leather material and sport very large R and L indicators on the inside speaker covers that you cannot miss.

The majority of all the controls are on the left ear cup, where you’ll find…
• Volume Up, Multi-function (play/pause/skip), Volume Down
• Power on (bluetooth) and corresponding LED
• 3.5mm audio jack
• A small hole which I’m assuming is the microphone for ANC

Over on the right ear cup are the following…
• ANC switch and corresponding LED
• Micro-USB charging port

Setup

1. Insert the micro-USB charging cable and fully charge the headset. Allow up to 6 hours for a full charge. The LED will be red while charging and will turn blue when charging is complete.
2. Download the Audeara app from the Play store for Android devices or from the App Store for Apple devices.
3. Turn on your headphones with the switch on the left ear cup. It may help to put them on your head before you flip the switch as there are voice prompts. Press and hold the multifunction button (center of the three) for three seconds to put your headphones in pairing mode. You’ll hear “pairing” and/or see the LED flash blue/red. Go into Bluetooth settings on your device and select Audeara A-01 from the new device list. You can set up a second device repeating the same step with a limit of two connected devices.
4. Now you get to personalize your headphones. This is technically a setup step, but I’m going to move into performance because it’s so intricately linked.

Performance

As I mentioned earlier, I was excited to jump into the hearing profile test. Their App offers 3 levels of customization; 8, 16, or 32 bands which translate to a test that is either 3, 5 or 10 minutes of listening to beeps and adjusting sliders to show what you can and cannot hear. You can run the test for yourself or for others. It’s a cool process where you can increase the volume of each tone until you hear it (know what you’re listening for) and then back it down until you select ‘barely audible’ and move on to the next tone. You’ll need a quiet place to do this as the tones get really faint at the bottom of each adjustment. I left noise cancellation off for this step as I did notice some suppression.

Here’s what my 32 point graph look like after going through the steps and instructions on how to read them.

I have a list of songs that I like to use for checking out new headphones, but in this case I also wanted to have some visual cues for should I be hearing something. For this I used two different videos. One of them is one of my go-to songs Snarky Puppy – Lingus (We Like It Here) which has a great video. I also watched/listened to Dave Grohl’s Play. The track itself starts around the 8:15 mark. It’s a trippy video where Dave is playing all the different instruments for this epically long instrumental, but it’s cut in a way where you can see a lot of what you want to hear. It ended up being a great piece to test the A-01s as there are some sparse moments with clear notes, great percussion and then some heavy sections as well.

On a pure listening side, I ran through a ton of Tom Misch (thanks for the recommendation Satch!), Mike Shinoda’s new album (“Crossing a Line” is a great track) along with a bunch of my other favorites.

The App has personalization settings that let you set 0-100% personalization based on your hearing test which you can access through the saved user profiles. They suggest that you start your experience at 50% and work your way up to 100%. Each time you select a new percentage, you’ll need to hit the “Apply” button to have them take effect.

With a few different tracks, I started at 0% and then adjusted up. The difference was noticeable in a way I can’t quite describe. At 25% – 75% it kept sounding better in a way that was different than just messing with the typical EQ. Bouncing back down to 0% suddenly started sounding thin, almost like I was missing something. 100% sounded too polished? I don’t have the right word for it but would equate it to that ‘motion smoothing’ or ‘judder’ setting on your TV that makes things look too smooth.

I settled at 75% for my listening. My media all sounded great. Songs sounded clear and balanced. In tv shows, the quiet dialogue sections were much easier to hear without cranking up the volume only to have my ears blown out at the sudden explosion or whatever action happened next.

Here are a few things you’ll want to be aware of…

  • I was able to wear the headphones for good long stretches of 4 hours and beyond without issue. The headband did not ever feel heavy on the top of my head and my ears didn’t overheat the way they do with some much more common ANC headphones you might be familiar with.
  • The headphones must be powered on to use the personalization settings
  • The app requires cellular or wifi connectivity to function. (You should only need the app if you’re setting up or changing personalization)The audio test requires Bluetooth. It actually will connect to your phone with two separate BT connections. One for the test and one for general listening. It was a bit confusing to see in the settings panel of my phone, and more so, when I was obviously connected to audio, but the Audeara app was telling me I wasn’t. It wasn’t mentioned in the literature, or on the site, but their customer service team helped me understand what was going on. 
  • The hearing test can be a bit glitchy. I had no issues with the 8 tone test, but the 16 and 32 tone test got progressively harder to use. The tones started delaying and getting behind what I was doing. I had the best luck manually scrolling to the lowest tone to start the tests and then timing my responses after each beep. Took a bit more time, but ultimately you’re likely to only go through this process once or every so often. It was pretty frustrating, but the end result personalization was worth the trouble. (I was able to confirm that my review set had an as of yet unreleased FW version, so hoping they continue to work out the bugs.)
  • At the pivot locations and edges of the sliders, the corners are a bit on the sharp side. It’s not major, but you might feel one of them if hanging around your neck for any length of time.

The A-01s are super versatile. You can plug in the 3.5mm headphone cord and just start listening right away (and it looks like the audio cord takes priority over the Bluetooth connection). To get any of the custom profiles, you’ll need them powered on.  When you flip on the ANC, there’s a brief audio drop while the processing kicks in. No big deal, as you’re likely not toggling it on and off frequently. ANC is also optional which is great if you were to reach the end of your battery, at which point you can listen with the audio cable again (unpersonalized).

Speaking of the battery. I made sure I had a full charge before leaving on my trip. I hit about 40+ hours of plane, train, and long taxis before getting ready for my flight home where I charged them just to make sure I did not run out mid-flight. Audeara’s estimate of ≤65 hours looks to be pretty accurate.

The multifunction and volume buttons are super small. I was able to use my thumb instead of a thumbnail, but in the end, it was actually easier for me using my phone to make those adjustments as it was usually right in front of me.

[Sidebar/open question here, and aimed more at Bluetooth headphones as a category – Why are power and Bluetooth LEDs on the outside of headphones? One generally flips the on button and looks at the LED before putting them on their head, and you’re definitely not going to see that LED once you’re wearing them. Couldn’t all that flashing be inside the ear cup and not annoy your seatmate on the flight? Just a thought.]

What I like

• Build and aesthetic quality – solid, sturdy, clean
• Sound quality – clean and clear (w/ & w/o ANC)
• Custom sound profile based on your own hearing
• Rechargeable battery and its running time

What needs to be improved

• Hearing test app is glitchy
• Volume and multi-function buttons are really small
• Edges on each side of the sizing adjustment are a little sharp

Final thoughts

I’m really happy with these headphones. They’re not cheap, but they’re sitting in the same price zone as all the major players with some killer features that make them stand out. I have had multiple generations of Bose QCs over the years. I can confidently say that Audeara has nailed it with the A-01s. The headphones are built solidly, look great and then paired with sound profile customization that is fantastic. I’m looking forward to an official FW update that hopefully resolves some of  the test issues. Overall… very well done.

Price: $249.99
Where to buy: Audeara and Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Audeara.

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Audeara A-01 Wireless Headphones review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 5, 2019 at 11:00 am.

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iCaddy is a phone and tablet stand for kids with hidden extras

NEWS – iCaddy is a universal folding stand for smartphones and tablets that was designed by a 7-year-old. Designed by a kid for kids, it comes in a variety of patterns for girls and boys and features a built-in 2600mAh power bank and a storage compartment that can hold earbuds (included) and other small items. You can read more about the iCaddy and order one for $19.99 from shopicaddy.com

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iCaddy is a phone and tablet stand for kids with hidden extras originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 5, 2019 at 10:00 am.

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