Struggling to keep your file downloads organized, or have you suddenly lost connection on a download at 99%? If you don’t already have a download manager installed on your Linux machine, it’s time to get one. Thankfully, there are several good download managers for Linux users to try. Here are four of the best. While we are using Linux Mint as an example, most of them should work on other Linux distros, too. 1. Persepolis If you’re looking for an open-source, quick, and capable download manager for your Linux Mint installation, look no further than Persepolis. Persepolis is actually a GUI wrapper for a terminal… Read more
Swann Floodlight Security Camera review
REVIEW – Not all that long ago we had an event where someone let themselves into our unlocked car (my bad), and root through our glovebox. Not unexpected as we live in an area where cars are broken into frequently and packages are stolen all the time. What was infuriating is that I had/have a nest cam clearly visible on the garage and this person sat in the car with the door open for 15 minutes and casually looked through all the papers in our car. Time to up the game. Swann has a new Floodlight Security Camera with motion detection, siren and two-way audio. Review time! To the keyboard.
What is it?
What do you call a floodlight that also has a security camera? It should have a name that aptly describes what it is without further definition… Hmm. How about a Floodlight Security Camera? All kidding aside, Swann has given it a name that ensures it will show up in search results which is likely more than half the battle in getting eyes on your product. As you would expect, this is an all-in-one unit that could result in you having fewer things hanging off the side of your house or garage.
What’s in the box?
- Security Floodlight Camera
- Double-sided foam mounting ring
- Mounting hardware and wire nuts
- Manual and welcome card
- Security stickers and window badge
Hardware specs
Design and features
The most relevant design feature is that this looks like a traditional floodlight. It’s not immediately obvious that this product has a camera and that’s to its advantage. Thieves and nefarious types scoping your property may be less concerned with a floodlight than with something that is clearly a standalone camera until that floodlight is more than a floodlight.
It has two-way audio so you that you can use your app to speak directly through the fixture as well as hear what’s going on. A built-in siren can be set to automatically sound on motion detection.
The fact that it’s hardwired is also great as it means you’re not at the whim of battery issues unless of course there’s a black out or your power is cut. You likely have a bigger problem in both of those cases.
Setup
I’ll refer to the Security Floodlight Camera as SFC going forward to keep things easy. You’ll need to be comfortable with some electrical wiring and lightweight home-fix-it skills. For this install, we’ll make the assumption that you are replacing an existing light fixture. Let’s get set up.
Go to your electrical panel and find the breaker switch for the light you’re replacing. Make sure to switch it off and check that power is not present.
1. Remove your current light fixture and mounting bracket (likely a combination of screws and electrical wire-nuts). Take note if this light is connected to a switch. If it is you’ll want to bypass, or tape/mark that switch not to be used as you will not want the SFC accidentally switched off.
2. Install the double-sided mounting tape circle to the back of the SFC.
3. Install the mounting bracket for the SFC allowing the home’s electrical wires to extend beside the main arch.
4. Wire the positive, negative and ground wires to your home’s electrical wires using the supplied wire-nuts. (You’re likely to have a more traditional junction box than my above scenario where I used crimp connectors that I had on hand so that I could feed the excess wiring through the hole before mounting.)
5. Turn on your breaker and confirm that you have the SFC correctly connected. The lights should come on initially (but could time out) and the blue LED should start blinking for pairing the wifi. If all is good, turn the power back off and finish the hardware install.
6. Peel the remaining backer off the mounting tape, insert the long mounting bolt through the SFC with the rubber o-ring in place into the mounting bracket and tighten (If you missed the adhesive step earlier, cut the ring in one spot so you don’t have to undo the wiring).
7. Position your lights and camera by using the wingnuts to adjust the toothed pivots. Use the collar to adjust the rotation. Use care to turn any of these in the direction that involves the least rotation to avoid pulling internal wires unnecessarily. Leave them a bit loose as you’ll end up adjusting them to suit your specific situation after the next steps.
Now it’s time to set up the app.
8. Find the app in the appropriate store for your device, download, open and register for an account.
9. Turn on your breaker switch (hopefully for the final time) to power up the SFC and confirm the blue LED is blinking.
10. Open the app and follow the instructions to pair your new camera. You’ll need to know your wifi network name and password and be prepared to do the app to settings, back to app jump that all the kids are doing these days.
11. If all that finished properly you should be good to go. The remaining set-up is all physical positioning and app preferences which ends up being a bit of back and forth between both of those. Let’s move on to performance and address that in the rest of the review.
Performance
Once everything is up and running, the system works like this…
When the Security Floodlight Camera detects motion the light, siren and camera activate based on how you’ve set them up in the app. Simultaneously you will receive a push notification on your device through the app. Click on the message and you’re taken into the app, directly to the Activity page where you will find recorded clips ordered from most recent to oldest. Here’s a screenshot of the video quality which is set to medium quality for this review.
Swann recommends that the fixture is mounted at least 8 ft off the ground. My garage is only 8 feet tall total so using the existing mounting location it sits just under 7′. As you can see my driveway is also pretty short so there are a couple of camera settings I needed to make right away. Here’s what those settings screens look like.
Under the Camera tab, I had to set the motion sensitivity to Low, as anything higher generated an alert for every single car driving by as well as anyone walking their dog. These were also triggering push notifications (as they should) which meant I was getting a couple a minute during the day as we’ve got a lot of construction activity on our street. I went ahead and turned off motion detection until I could fix the settings.
Even at the low sensitivity setting, I was getting too many false motion detects. Each setting is a discrete position on that slider instead of a 0-100% bar where you can just find the real setting you need. To solve that I had to tilt the camera down further to shorten the range. This is a trial and error adjustment as there’s no visual in the app to estimate where the “trigger” line is for motion. My situation may be an edge case so ignore if your setup is more traditional. Now set up, I re-enabled the motion detection.
When you hop into the app normally, your landing page gives you access to Lights and Siren toggle buttons as well as a live view you can click into. I named the camera ‘Driveway’ so this will be whatever location name you choose.
The bottom left icon lets you toggle between Home, Away and Night settings and will show whatever icon is currently active. Each of these can be set up with their own settings for camera, siren and lights to match your needs.
The bottom right icon is a quick jump into activity recordings. The built-in memory card stores 8 days on a rolling basis where day 8 overwrites day 1 to start the cycle again. If something isn’t visible on the Activity page, check the backup at the very bottom of the camera settings in the app by pressing ‘View Camera Backup’. You can upload clips to Swann’s Secure Cloud for two days and if you need more storage you can upgrade to a subscription plan that includes 30 days of storage for $4.99/month within the app.
The app takes a little navigating to get used to as almost every screen has additional settings and buttons so allow yourself some time to get comfortable in there. Clicking into the live view (main image) gives you access to lights and siren as well as additional buttons for Talk, Record and Capture.
With talk you can converse with your thief, or tell your kids it’s time to put down the basketball and come in for dinner. Record starts a video recording whereas Capture takes a photo.
The light settings can be set to stay on for .5, 1, 2, 5, 10 or 15 minutes after motion detection and you can set the brightness level anywhere from 1-100%. You should also know that the lights will not activate in sunlight (which in general shouldn’t be an issue). I’ve currently got the brightness set to 35%, but here’s a shot with the light at 100% for reference. Plenty bright to illuminate a shady character or wildlife in the dark.
The siren has its own Yes/No toggle for responding to motion and can be set to sound for seconds (5, 10, 15, 30) or minutes (1, 2, 5) at Low/Medium/High volume which also sets the level for 2-way audio. Sirens are not very effective here in Oakland unless you’ve got a subscription with a security service to respond, so it’s more for the owner’s benefit in that case. Our driveway is also covered by a large tree that moves a lot in wind resulting in false alarms, so I have the siren set not to activate. I did test the siren though and the low setting isn’t loud enough to cause anyone any fuss, so I’d recommend setting to High if you’re actually trying to use the alarm as a deterrent.
You’ll definitely want to set up the Home, Away and Night settings so that the alerts that come through are ones that matter. With four of us at home on different schedules, it’s unlikely this will get switched when it needs to. Here’s a friendly nudge at Swann to look into supporting IFTTT for helping that automation take a step forward.
There is integration with Alexa or Google Assistant for working with some home devices you might have. Ask Alexa to “Show Driveway” and you get a live view after about 15 seconds of thinking.
What I like
- Pretty low effort install
- Bright lights with good coverage
- Easy to access recordings without recurring monitoring fees
- Very configurable (lights, siren, motion detection)
What I’d change
- Better method for determining detection range during setup
- Automation for determining Home, Away, Night
Final thoughts
The Swann Floodlight Security Camera is installed and my driveway lights up when entered and I get a motion alert on my phone and watch. I haven’t had and uninvited car visitor since installation and continue to hope I won’t, but I do feel safer and more aware of what’s happening in my driveway. The lighting is superb and the automatic recordings make it easy to see and hear what happens in my driveway when I’m not around. Thanks Swann!
Price: $179
Where to buy: Swann and Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Swann.
Filed in categories: Reviews
Tagged: security camera
Swann Floodlight Security Camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 2, 2019 at 11:00 am.
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The CMSBIKE F16 Folding Electric Bicycle provides power on the go in more than one way!
NEWS – I can remember my boyhood days when riding a bicycle was not only one of my important daily activities for fun, but it was also my only mode of transportation if I wanted to be independent and to travel wherever I wanted in a reasonable amount of time. Back in those days, every bicycle was a pedal bike, and whenever I got tired the only options were to stop and rest or to discontinue any further travel plans and return home once rested.
These days, now that we have become accustomed to having every convenience when on the go and to getting where we need to go with minimal effort, there are electric bikes to replace our pedal bikes if that is our intended mode of transportation.
The CMSBIKE F16 is exactly such an option/alternative. This electric bike features three riding modes; the human mode, the assistant mode, the electric mode. It is built on a light and flexible frame that is foldable for easy storage and carrying if/when necessary.
It also features a front and rear dual-disc brake system on 16” wheels, with a frame made out aluminum alloy, a 36V 250W brushless high speed toothed motor, a maximum speed of 25km/h/15.5mph, a built-in 2600mAh Li-ion battery for charging and powering mobile devices, an LCD Instrument panel, LED headlights and it weighs 20kg/55lbs.
The CMSBILE F16 is available for purchase on the Bangood website for $690.
Filed in categories: News
Tagged: Bicycle
The CMSBIKE F16 Folding Electric Bicycle provides power on the go in more than one way! originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 2, 2019 at 10:00 am.
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Kärcher K2000 electric pressure washer review
REVIEW – When I review a gadget, audio gear or household item, I seldom write about a product’s long-term durability. The reason for this is that we at The Gadgeteer strive to write reviews quickly so you can make an informed buying decision sooner. I wish we did, but we don’t have a year to test a product before writing. This review of the Kärcher K2000 electric pressure washer is a bit different. While I don’t have any foreknowledge regarding the K2000’s long-term future, I do have history with Kärcher—and based on that, I have an idea how long the K2000 will last.
What is it?
The Kärcher K2000 is an electric pressure washer that has a pressure rating of 2,000 PSI (per square inch) and 1.3 GPM (gallons of water per minute). It has dual detergent tanks, 25 ft. of hose, 35 ft. electric cord with a GFCI plug, a handy, wind-up hose reel and wrap around cord storage. It’s made for home (not professional) use.
Specs
- 120-Volt
- 13 Amps
- 35 ft. GFCI cord
- Wobble Pump
- Dual 1 quart detergent tanks
- Cold temperature
- 2000 PSI pressure
- 1.3 GPM water flow
- 25 ft. Hose
- Hose reel
- M22 industry standard hose connection
- 2 wheel cart
- Spray gun
- Three pressure nozzles
- Weight: 46.4 lbs.
- Length: 22 in.
- Width: 18.25 in.
- Height: 35.5 in.
- 3 Year warranty
Design and features
Living in a humid climate means dirt, mildew and other stuff showing up on outdoor surfaces, such as backyard decks, siding and concrete driveways and sidewalks. Only a pressure washer can easily and safely remove this.
For those who’ve never used a pressure washer, think of it as a super-powerful spray nozzle, except that it can actually clean surfaces by blasting away dirt and mildew. I find it kind of therapeutic and fun to pressure wash around my property.
There are two types of pressure washers; gas and electric. I’ve borrowed gas versions from family and friends before and while they are powerful, they drink gas, are loud, stinky and incredibly heavy. Electric models are lighter, quieter and not as powerful as gas, but the gap has narrowed. 2000 PSI on an electric pressure washer is not uncommon and is plenty powerful for home use.
I became familiar with Kärcher when I bought a less powerful pressure washer about ten years ago. That washer was not treated kindly and I lost (and never replaced) the removable water filter long ago, so all kinds of water contaminants were passing through the pump for years. Despite this mistreatment, the Kärcher only became unreliable a few months ago and finally needed replacing. It’s because of the Kärcher’s toughness that I decided to stay with the brand and go with the more powerful K2000.
The K2000 pressure washer is extremely simple to set up out of the box—about 10 minutes. Once assembled, just plug it in, connect the hoses and you’re cleaning. The handle quickly folds down so it takes up less space in the garage.
Even though the Kärcher K2000 is much lighter than a gas model, it’s still almost 50 lbs. Two oversized wheels make moving the unit around easier. My older Kärcher had small wheels and a too short handle. You had to bend over to move it. It was—literally—a pain in the back to move.
One major change from my previous Karcher washer is a step-controlled on/off switch. This is much more convenient and also easy on the back. There are two large, removable storage bins on the unit for holding detergent bottles for the dual tanks as well as the pressure wand. The dual detergent tanks can be used independently by turning a 1 or 2 dial.
Using the Kärcher 2000 is easy with one notable exception. It takes some effort to squeeze and hold the trigger on the wand handle. All pressure washers I’ve used are like this and I don’t get it. After using a while, fingers and hand muscles can get tired from continually squeezing the trigger. However, there is a way to make this less stressful on your hands. When using the washer, mentally designate a small area to clean. When that’s done, choose the next small area. This breaks up any large job into smaller jobs which helps make things less overwhelming. Plus, it gives your muscles a rest between sections. It’s also best to use a sweeping motion when spraying. Doing it in these smaller areas gives better results.
One thing I like about the K2000 is that as soon as you stop spraying, the motor shuts off until you start spraying again. You don’t have to listen to a loud motor the whole time, as with a gas model. The downside to this is that when you resume spraying, the motor takes a second to rev up to speed. It’s mildly annoying, but you get used to it.
All hoses and nozzles on the K2000 use M22 quick connections. This is an industry standard that allows you to easily swap parts and provides a secure, water-tight fit. It also allows other branded nozzles and hoses to be used with the Kärcher. However, once I wasn’t careful when connecting a nozzle. When I pressed the trigger, the nozzle flew across the yard and I had trouble finding where it landed. I learned my lesson—double check that the connection is secure before using!
The K2000 comes with three nozzles. The 15° nozzle concentrates more power on a smaller area. This helps with more stubborn dirt or mildew. The 40° nozzle covers a wider area but with a bit less power. It’s a good nozzle for general cleaning and it’s the one I use 90% of the time. Then there’s the turbo nozzle. This nozzle sprays in a cylindrical, cone-shaped pattern that becomes more powerful as the nozzle is moved closer to the surface being cleaned. I’m not a fan of this nozzle because power severely drops off when the nozzle is raised farther away from the surface. It requires too much thinking to use and I like to switch off the brain while pressure cleaning.
The nozzles snap into a built-in holder on the K2000, making it easy to quickly grab the one you need while keeping the others safe when not in use.
There’s a soap nozzle for applying detergent when washing a car or pre-cleaning a driveway or deck before pressure washing. Speaking of using detergent—I don’t. Never have. I also do not use a pressure washer to wash my car because if you’re not careful, the pressurized water can strip paint if it’s already loose on a bumper or it can force water into areas it shouldn’t. A garden hose spray nozzle can’t do that kind of damage. I realize that some people love using a pressure washer for their cars—I’m just wary of it.
Detergent can help with a dirty deck, but again, I just stick to the 40° nozzle because it works fine as is. Care must be taken with cleaning wooden decks with a pressure washer. The water can damage deck wood if placed too close to the surface for too long.
Kärcher does not supply a sample-sized detergent bottle with the K2000, so it’s an additional purchase if you want to try it. Trust me though, you don’t need detergent to clean concrete—just time, water and pressure.
What I like
- Powerful
- Auto shut-off motor
- Nozzle selection
- Standard M22 connections
- Wheels!
- Relatively quiet for a pressure washer
- Foot operated on/off
- Affordable
What I’d change
- Trigger could be easier to press
Final Thoughts
I’m a fan of Kärcher pressure washers. Kärcher makes many electric models as well as more powerful gas models if that’s what you need. If you’re a homeowner who only needs a pressure washer occasionally, the K2000 is more than powerful enough to get the job done with minimal fuss. It’s affordable and should last a long time—based on personal experience. Plus, it doesn’t take up much room when stored.
Price: $279 US
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample for this product was provided by Kärcher.
Filed in categories: Reviews
Tagged: Cleaning, Home and Kitchen
Kärcher K2000 electric pressure washer review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 2, 2019 at 9:00 am.
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You can’t improve bubble wrap. 3M, hold my beer and watch this…
NEWS – Bubble wrap – arguably the greatest invention for protecting packages, not to mention providing hours of satisfying popping fun. How could you possibly improve on that? I mean, shipping items is pretty simple – get a box, put in your item to ship, pad it completely with some bubble wrap, get out your handy-dandy tape gun, tape it up, typically after pulling apart some of the tape that stuck together while muttering a few choice words, and finally, you’re ready to ship. OK – that’s really a lot of steps.
3M found a better way and came up with flex & seal – a self-sticking sheet of bubble wrap that allows you to make a perfectly sized padded envelope to ship your small items.
To use, drop your item on the sheet, cut it to size, fold it over and it self-seals, creating a sealed, padded shipping envelope. The gray side sticks to itself, but not your item.
While this certainly can ease your shipping woes, it does look like a single-use item, whereas boxes and traditional bubble wrap can be used multiple times, assuming your delivery driver didn’t destroy the box when they threw it on your porch and ran. And, this doesn’t look like it will be very satisfying to pop. On the upside, it is recyclable as plastic wrap and you can find a store drop off location here.
If you regularly ship smaller items, this does look like it would make life a lot easier. To learn more, visit the flex & seal site. To purchase, visit Amazon. It is available in 15-inch wide rolls in 10, 20, 50 and 200-foot lengths. Prices start at $9.99 for a 15-inch x 10-foot roll.
Filed in categories: News
Tagged:
You can’t improve bubble wrap. 3M, hold my beer and watch this… originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 2, 2019 at 8:00 am.
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