Conbrov 1080P USB charger hidden camera review

REVIEW – I’ve taken a liking to home security since some vehicles near my home were burglarized. I have several security cameras, but, since they look like cameras, if someone was to enter my home, they would like to be the first thing to be destroyed, taken, you get the idea.  I’ve toyed with the idea of having something more discrete and volunteered to have a look at Conbrov’s WiFi 1080P USB charger camera.

What is it?

Conbrov’s WiFi 1080P USB charger camera is a plug-in security camera. It looks like an oversized USB charger and equipped with a working 1 Amp USB port, an internal backup battery, and night vision.

Hardware Specs:

  • 1080P resolution, 160° viewing angle, 15fps
  • Internal 500mA battery1 Amp USB port
  • Selectable night vision modes
  • WiFi
  • Maximum SD card capacity of 64GB
  • JustMyCam app

What’s in the Box?

  • Camera
  • Instruction manual
  • Wall plug adapter
  • Conbrov VIP card
  • Amazon “warning” card (covert cameras with audio are illegal to sell on Amazon in the U.S.A)
  • Unicef $1 donation card for submitting a review

Design and Features:

First, let’s address the elephant in the room. I am not a pervert, deviant, voyeur or creep. I have no intention of using this camera for unscrupulous, immoral or illegal purposes. My sole intention is to use this camera to supplement my home security system in a common area of my home. It will never be placed in a location that would compromise the privacy or modesty of anyone living in or visiting my home.

The camera arrived in a strong, largely black box about 3-1/2 X 3-1/2 X 5 inches. The camera is protected by a cardboard “nest” and wrapped in a plastic bag. The camera itself measures 3-1/4 X 2 X 1-1/4 inches. The construction is largely plastic, with sliding doors to access the controls.

Controls are basic, on/off, SD card slot, reset, microphone on/off, and motion detect mode. There are two LEDs with status indicators, but they can’t be turned off. They are under the doors so they are not obvious, but some of the lighting from the LEDs illuminates the inside of the camera and is visible through the cooling vents.

According to the instructions:

I grabbed a 64 GB SD card to format as FAT32 only… Hmmm, really? Windows limits FAT32 to a maximum of 32 GB. There are third-party apps that can format FAT32 drives larger than 32 GB, but the manual specifically states to use Windows only to format the card. So….

I grabbed a 32 GB SD, format it as FAT32, and started through the installation process. I loaded the JustMyCam app on my phone, connected to my network and connected to the camera, all relatively painless.

The app is intuitive and connects to the camera quickly. It allows viewing a live video feed or access to the library of 10-minute videos that the camera records in a loop after the SD card has been filled.  There is even an internal 500mAbattery to keep it running if unplugged or the power goes out. Everything works as described.

Setup functions allow mirroring and flipping of the image, creation of a passcode to safeguard recorded videos, alarm scheduling for mothing detection and recording, SD card management, image management, and network setting.

Image quality is sharp, but with a distorted “fish-eye lens” appearance. More significantly, the image cannot be changed from portrait to landscape. Switching to “full screen” squishes the portrait image into a landscape format, making the image barely usable.

Night vision capabilities are quite good with plenty of illumination for the majority of rooms.

A portrait image just isn’t practical for home security, where a wider field of view is a necessity.  Because of this, I won’t be using this camera as I originally intended as a backup for my Canary camera system. Instead, I’ll probably use it in my garage to make sure I’ve closed the door.

What I like

  • Small size
  • Good image quality
  • SD storage

What needs to be improved?

  • Needs landscape image capability
  • Internal battery

Final thoughts:

Conbrov’s WiFi 1080P USB charger camera is a convenient way to add video to your home.  The app is basic but has plenty of useful functionality. Unfortunately, the inability of the camera to produce a landscape picture is a killer if your goal is to use it as a home security enhancement.

Price: $60.95
Where to buy: Amazon (30%off code: 30OFFNT20 expires 9/29/18)
Source: The sample for this review was provided by Conbrov.

Filed in categories: Reviews

Tagged:

Conbrov 1080P USB charger hidden camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 31, 2018 at 9:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

YI Cloud Home Camera review

REVIEW – When the YI Cloud Home Camera review offer came along I thought it would be nice to review and contrast it with other cameras that I have reviewed. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose – keep reading to find out which this was.

What is it?

The YI Cloud Home Camera is an indoor surveillance camera that has quite a few useful features including motion tracking and cloud storage.

What’s in the box?

  • YI Cloud Home Camera
  • Power cord and wall plug
  • Quick connect sheet
  • Window stickers
  • Wall mount bracket

Design and features

The YI Cloud Home Camera features a 1080p full HD camera with “Complete 360° Coverage”, enhanced night vision, smartphone control, baby crying detection, motion detection and real-time activity alerts as well as two-way intercom audio capability.

The YI camera was fairly simple to set up. The process begins with signing up for a YI account and verifying your e-mail with a link they e-mail to you:



After a pointless 4 page intro, you simply tap the “+” to add a camera and follow the simple on-screen directions to connect to the camera and your home wi-fi.






The camera has a much-too-small QR code on it that you must scan with the phone camera to pair it to the camera, it took it a little while to finally focus well enough on the camera to get it to connect. The camera has audible voice prompts as well, which I thought was a nice touch.

Once connected you’re presented with the default screen for the app, which is a list of the cameras you have connected, which also features an image from the last session as well as options for viewing Sharing, Alerts, Settings, and Watching cloud-stored video. Tapping the image starts the viewing of live video from the camera.

The settings section for the camera is fairly extensive, providing quite a bit of control and options.


I liked how that during viewing of the camera, you can choose between SD and HD video or choose the Auto option to have the app decide, presumably on your available bandwidth. Other controls include the microphone, record video, take photo, take a panoramic photo, and view full screen. There are also three icons at the bottom of the screen that allows for manual camera positioning, motion tracking, and alert viewing.

Full screen viewing

The manual camera positioning is a nice feature, however, it is slow to respond, which makes the positioning of the camera less than easy. The motion tracking feature works very well and is able to track a person as they walk through the room and was even sensitive enough to pick up my motion while just sitting at my desk.

The panoramic photo feature is very poor. When you take a pano image, the camera rotates and takes a picture, repeating this throughout a full rotation and then stitches the images together to produce a 360° image. However, the image stitching is very poor, often leaving gaps in the image coverage up to 3 feet wide.

Another thing that the app needs to improve on is the turning on and off of the motion detection/alert feature. You have to go into the Camera Settings, then once in the Camera Settings you have to tap on the Smart Detection settings, then toggle the Motion Detection setting. This would be really annoying if you had multiple cameras. There is also no indication from the main screen of the app that the camera is set for Motion Detection, so you have to go through the above steps just to see if its on.

Perhaps one of the biggest drawbacks of the YI Cloud Home Camera is the cloud storage subscription price. The options range from $8.66 a month for 7-day storage to $19.99 a month for 30-day storage. You can choose to either upload motion detected videos only (up to 5 devices) or 24/7 around-the-clock upload for only 1 device. I thought these prices were a bit high. The camera also supports a micro-SD card, but that wouldn’t do you any good if the thieves also steal your camera.

The app also notifies you of new logins to your account, which is a nice security feature.

What I like

  • Audible “Waiting to Connect” voice prompt when turned on
  • Activation link email
  • High quality still photos
  • Manual camera control
  • Login notifications

What needs to be improved

  • Very poor pano stitching
  • Alert frequency ranges from low, medium, and high with no indication of what that time period is
  • Notifications are inconsistent. I did not always get a notification while using the app, even if I was not viewing the camera at the time. There’s just an in-app Alerts icon that gets a red dot over it
  • Works only with the app, no website or IP camera capability
  • Motion Detection setting is too buried in the app

Final thoughts

Although the YI Cloud Home Camera features look inviting and seem to have everything you’ll want, the actual use and storage options may be a bit of a turn-off. However, if you’re looking for a budget camera for casual monitoring, this camera might be one to consider, it really depends on what you intend to use it for.

Price: $44.99
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by YI Technology

Filed in categories: Reviews

Tagged:

YI Cloud Home Camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on July 31, 2018 at 9:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

Momentum Niro WiFi Garage Door Controller with Built-in Camera review


REVIEW – Here was a typical scenario in our household: We’re getting ready to go somewhere and hop into the car parked in the garage. We open the garage door, back out, and drive away. “Did I close the garage door?” my husband asks me. After thinking about it, I respond, “I don’t remember.” We then turn the car around to go back to the house to check to see if we closed the garage door.

Products like the Momentum Niro Universal WiFi Garage Door Controller with Built-in Camera help to eliminate such scenarios. I was able to review this product and found that it works fairly well. You can open or close the garage door from anywhere, view the live video stream within the garage, and manually take pictures or record video. Furthermore, you can set up rules to create automatic recordings and send notifications when motion or sound is detected. It works with the Nest thermostat but does not appear to work with Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit, or other smart home systems. In addition, the app needs a little reorganization.

What is it?

The Momentum Niro Universal WiFi Garage Door Controller with Built-in Camera is a WiFi garage door controller with a built-in 720P camera that attaches to your existing compatible garage door openers. It allows you to monitor, record movement or sound from within the garage, and open or close your garage door from anywhere using the Momentum app. It will also send you notifications of any motion or sound event detected.

Hardware specs

Camera: HD Camera with 720P sensor
Field of View: 110° wide-angle lens
Motion Detection: Adjustable sensitivity with push notifications
Night Vision: Infrared LEDs with Automatic Night Vision Mode
SD Card Slot: Micro SD Slot (up to 128GB SD Card)
Compatible Garage Doors: Garage Compatibility List
Connectivity: 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi connection @ 2.4GHz or 5.0GHz
Audio: Two Way Audio
Dimensions: Height: 5.30”, Width: 3.00”, Thickness: 0.99”
Weight: 5.30 oz
Power: 100-240V
Warranty: 1-Year Limited Warranty 

What’s in the box?

  • Momentum Niro Garage Door Controller
  • USB Cable
  • Power Adapter
  • Garage Door Control Wires
  • Mounting Plate (round metal plate)
  • Round 3M Double-sided Adhesive Tape
  • Niro Quick Start Guide
  • Niro User Manual

Design and features

The Momentum Niro Universal WiFi Garage Door Controller comes with a built-in camera which resides in a rigid plastic housing. Starting from the top of the device, you can see the infrared light for night vision, the camera lens, the microphone, and the indicator/status light.

The indicator lights are as follows:

  • solid red light: the camera is booting up
  • slow blinking red light: disconnected from WiFi
  • double blinking blue light: ready to connect to WiFi
  • blinking blue light: connected to WiFi
  • solid blue light: a user is currently live streaming

In the above photo starting from the left, the back of Niro shows the reset button, the wire connector ports (in green), the release buttons (in orange), the micro-USB power port, and the built-in speaker. The whole assembly is mounted on a plastic ball pivot hinge to allow you to rotate and position Niro as you wish.

One side of Niro contains the micro-SD card slot which will accommodate a card up to 128GB. You can save videos to Momentum’s cloud or an SD card (not provided). You do not have to use a cloud plan to use Niro. Yay! But just in case you are interested, they have a 7-day event recording plan for $5 per month and a 30-day event recording plan for $10 per month (see Momentum Capture Cloud Service). I generally gravitate toward devices that have local storage rather than pay for a cloud plan.

The bottom of Niro has a silicone base and a magnet that you can use to mount it to the metal mounting plate.

Setup

App Setup

The first thing I needed to do was to download the Momentum app onto my phone (Pixel 2 XL) and create an account. I then needed to pair Niro to the app.

To pair Niro with the app, I needed to plug it into an outlet. We used the same outlet that our garage door opener was connected to.

Once plugged in, the status light was a solid red indicating that Niro was booting up.


After booting up, I was supposed to hear a voice stating that Niro was in pairing mode but unfortunately, I didn’t. Instead, I had to verify that the status LED light was flashing red and blue and thankfully it was.  I then went back into the app, tapped on “Pair” and tapped on the “Momentum Niro Garage Door Controller” from the list of other Momentum devices.


At that point, I then selected my WiFi network and entered my credentials.

After pairing with the app and connecting to my network, I then tried to update the firmware but it failed the first time. It did finally update.


Next, I named my Niro garage door controller “Garage”, after which I needed to complete the rest of the physical installation of the device.

Niro Garage Door Controller setup

We used the double-sided round 3M adhesive provided and placed it under our garage door opener. You could then attach Niro to this adhesive disk, but instead, we chose to attach the round metal plate to the adhesive.

Then we attached Niro magnetically to the metal plate. This allows us to easily remove Niro should we ever need to.

Next, we needed to attach the wires to the garage door opener. The garage door controller wire provided is much longer than what is needed, so we trimmed the wire and stripped the insulation at the end we cut (use this end to connect to the garage door opener terminals shown above).

The two wires, beige and white, were attached to the 1 and 2 positions of our opener by unscrewing the screws and wrapping the exposed ends of the wires around each screw and then tightening them. These terminals on your garage door opener are most likely already connected to your push button controller, and by connecting Niro to the same terminals, you are installing two switches in parallel. This will ensure that either the push button or Niro will open or close the garage door at any time.

The other ends of the wires needed to be attached to Niro in the first two wire connector ports. “Note: Both wires are neutral, so it doesn’t matter which color wire goes into which of the two ports. However, make sure the open wire ends are not touching each other.” (-Niro Quick Start Guide).

If you happened to trim the control wire to a more reasonable length as I mentioned above, be sure to use the tinned ends (the ends that were stripped by the manufacturer and coated in solder to be rigid) because they will more easily fit into the tiny holes in the back of the Niro.

To insert the wires, the orange release buttons needed to be depressed.

Last, I inserted a 32 GB micro-SD card into the slot (this slot will accommodate up to 128GB).

Performance



The default Momentum dashboard has three tiles on it. However, you can change the dashboard appearance if you wish by tapping on the pencil icon located at the top right corner as shown in the first screenshot above.

Camera tile

To access the live video feed and camera controls, you must tap on the “Camera” tile which is the largest tile located at the top of the dashboard. In addition to the live video, it will allow you to tap on each of four icons located at the bottom of the screen (center screenshot above): Microphone icon for two-way communication, Record Video icon for manually recording video, Camera icon for manually taking a screenshot of the live video, and Activity icon for  viewing the activity for the day.

While in the “Camera” tile of the app, to perform two-way communication, you must press the Microphone icon once to speak to the person in front of the Niro camera and then again in order to hear them speak to you. To manually record a video, you need to tap on the Record Video icon to start the recording and then again to stop it. To take a picture, you need to tap on the Camera icon. The last icon is the Activity icon which will take you to a list of all the activities recorded.

I was able to speak to a person in the garage easily and the audio quality was fine. Additionally, recording and taking screenshots were easy too. I could view my manual video recordings and photos in the Activity list; although it takes a few minutes or so for them to show up there.

Garage tile

Next, you can access the garage door controls by tapping on the “Garage” tile in the lower left corner of the dashboard (the one that has a garage door icon on it). From here, you can view the live video feed and open and close the garage door. Most of the time I was able to open the garage door by using the app. However, there were a couple of times when I opened the app and it was unable to connect to the Niro garage door controller. This is a concern and thus you may want to carry a backup garage door remote when this happens.

I’m not sure why the “Camera” and “Garage” tiles couldn’t be combined into one. That way all the garage door and camera controls are all together for each of your Niro controllers.

By the way, the live views from the “Camera” and “Garage” tiles are normally identical. I actually adjusted the camera down in the right screenshot above which is why it looks different from the center screenshot.




Settings

While in the live video feed portion of the app, there is a gear icon located in the upper right corner of the screen that will give you a list of options to choose from: “Settings”, “Subscription”, or “About”.

In the settings, you can change the name of your device (second screenshot above), adjust the live video image quality, and adjust the sensitivity of the sound and motion detectors. You may also view camera backups on the SD card or format the card (third screenshot above). Additionally, you can set the garage door controller to control multiple garage doors near each other (last screenshot above).


Creating and using Rules

If you swipe left on the default Momentum app dashboard, you will see one other tile – the “Rules” tile. By tapping on it, you can create your own rules to trigger the Niro camera.




I created a rule for my Niro garage door controller. I only had one Niro, so it was already selected under the list of “Devices”. Then, under “Trigger”, I selected “Motion is detected” and under “Action”, I selected “Record a video”. Actually, I was unable to select anything else under “Trigger” or “Action”. I then selected which days and the time of day I wanted to detect and record motions. And last, I selected “Send app notification”.

Whenever Niro detected a motion, it would automatically record video of it and send me a notification. Notice that it also sent a notification that an “Audio Event” was detected in the screenshot above.

Here are a couple of samples of the video quality and audio quality of the Niro camera. Notice how nicely the camera switches from IR nighttime (our garage has no windows so it is dark when the garage door is closed) to daytime video.

While using Niro for about a month, I noticed that every recording was only 19 seconds long. Often, this was not enough time to record the entire motion event so another 19-second video was recorded to finish capturing it. However, the second video starts about 20 seconds after the end of the first video thus missing the end of the motion event and capturing nothing in the second recording. I received a motion event notification for each recording. There does not seem to be a way to alter the 19-second video recording length in the settings.

In addition, I noticed that I would receive another motion event notification a few minutes after closing the garage door. Perhaps it was due to the garage light shutting off thus eliminating shadows detected by the camera. You can adjust the sensitivity of the motion detector although it may not eliminate this issue.

You can use the Momentum app to control your Nest thermostat. To pair your Nest with the Momentum app, you must tap on the menu icon located in the upper left corner of the dashboard and select “Pair device”. Once paired, tapping on the thermostat tile on the Momentum dashboard flips it over. One side allows you to adjust the Nest to “Home” or “Away” modes. The other side allows you to change your temperature settings by sliding up or down on the snowflake icon or flame icon.

What I like

  • Installation was easy
  • I was able to check to view the garage door status and open/close the garage door while away from home
  • Transitioning from nighttime vision to daytime was seamless
  • It works with the Nest thermostat

What needs to be improved

  • Garage door and camera controls should be located in the same tile on the app
  • Allow the user to change the duration of the automatic recordings
  • It doesn’t appear to work with Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit, or other smart home systems

Final thoughts

I really enjoy using the Momentum Niro WiFi Universal Garage Door Controller with Built-in Camera. First of all, it was wonderfully easy to install. Furthermore, I was able to connect to Niro to check on my garage door status and open/close the garage door from anywhere. There were only a couple of times that I could not connect with Niro. Thus, I suggest that you keep your garage door remote with you, just in case.

There are a few things that mildly bothered me. First of all, it would be nice to have all the garage door and camera controls all in one place. Next, it would be nice to allow the user to alter the video recording durations beyond 19 seconds. Third, Niro only works with the Nest thermostat. It doesn’t work with Alexa or Google Home (or other smart home systems except for Nest). Other than these drawbacks, I really enjoy using the Momentum Niro. Please be sure to check your garage door opener for compatibility with Niro before purchasing.

Price: $99.88 – $99.95
Where to buy: Amazon and Momentum
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Momentum

Filed in categories: Reviews

Tagged: ,

Momentum Niro WiFi Garage Door Controller with Built-in Camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on July 19, 2018 at 9:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

Guardzilla 360 Outdoor All-In-One HD Camera review

REVIEW – There is almost no end to the number of security cameras on the market today, which is one of the reasons I’ve put off buying one. When the chance to review the Guardzilla 360 security cam came along, I jumped at the opportunity to see just what it could do.

What is it?

The Guardzilla 360 Outdoor All-In-One HD Camera is weatherproof Wi-Fi enabled outdoor security camera capable of notifying you via your phone when motion is detected. It also has the ability to stream live video to your phone and much more.

What’s in the box?

  • Guardzilla 360 Outdoor All-In-One HD Camera
  • Power adapter and 10′ power cord
  • Wall/ceiling mount
  • Desk stand
  • Window sticker
  • Setup Guide



 



Design and features

The Guardzilla 360 is designed to be able to see in all directions when mounted on a ceiling, wall, or table top. In effect, it’s just half of a sphere and not a full 360 degrees like a 360 action camera. When used as a security camera, as it’s designed, it’s perfect. You can simply swipe your finger on your phone screen and view an entire room or look in every direction if mounted on a ceiling.

The Guardzilla 360 has versatile mounting options such as a stand for placing it on any flat surface and a magnetic mount for mounting it to a wall or suspending it from a ceiling or eave. The magnetic ball mount is not only fantastic for pointing the camera in any direction, but it’s also extremely strong. I chose to mount it on my wall to monitor my office.

The Guardzilla 360 can run from both an AC power cord, or from the built-in rechargeable battery. The battery option is really nice in the case of a power outage or temporarily placing it somewhere.

The setup of the camera was pretty straightforward and easy. You can connect multiple cameras. I had only one camera, and each time I started the app it would automatically start with that camera selected.

Monitoring is as simple as tapping the “Monitor” button in the app. Once you’re monitoring you can adjust the volume, brightness, contrast, point-of-view, and designate whether it is mounted on a wall, ceiling, or table top.


Rotating your phone also rotates the view to full screen:

The night vision of the camera is good, however, sometimes there is a noticeable degradation in the picture quality, almost as though it’s not focusing correctly. I didn’t notice that before the last firmware update. The non-night vision mode actually performs pretty well in very low light.

Saving a snapshot during monitoring saves the full 360 image to your camera roll:

I found that the 90dB Siren just didn’t seem to be very loud. I’m not sure if it’s just me but I expected it to be much louder. My iPhone app showed it to be about 70dB at about 6 feet away, which is just over a regular speaking volume. There’s also no way to manually trigger the siren, it’s only set off when the motion detection is on. There is a setting for how long it plays though: 5, 15, 30, 60 or 120 seconds.

The motion sensors worked very well. Motion detection can be set to low, medium, and high. I set mine to low to avoid picking up my pets as often, but it would still pick up a person walking into the room. When the camera is “armed”, it can send an e-mail, text, and phone push notifications when motion is detected. Notifications were very quick and often arrived within 3 seconds. There is an event history list in the app where you can view events such as alarm set, alarm disarmed, motion events, images taken manually, etc. All motion events are captured in 8-second video clips and retained for two days for free. Cloud storage options provide longer video retention options. There’s even a setting to automatically arm and disarm the camera when you’re away by using your phone’s GPS location.

There is a listen feature that lets you hear what happens around the camera as well as a two-way talk feature that allows you to have two-way conversations through the camera’s speaker and mic.

The Guardzilla 360 can also integrate with other devices and services such as Nest, IFTTT applets, Alexa, and Google Assistant.

Guardzilla also offers professional 24/7 security monitoring for only $9.99 a month.

The one thing I would really like to be able to do is view the camera via a desktop browser. I work from home, and there are times I would like to monitor the front of my house when I’m expecting a delivery. Browser-based monitoring would be much easier than trying to do that via my phone.

There are quite a few settings for the app, but they aren’t all on one screen. If I had to choose something that I would like to see changed, I would prefer if they were organized differently, and showed the current setting value without having to tap on it. Here are a just some of the setting screens in the app:

What I like

  • No blind spots in camera coverage
  • Very good motion detection
  • Built-in rechargeable battery
  • Magnetic ball mount
  • Phone software automatically updates the camera firmware

What needs to be improved

  • The monitor view slowly creeps to the left (could be an issue with my phone)
  • A desktop browser-based viewer would be nice
  • Louder siren
  • Manually triggerable siren
  • Better indication of what video is saved in the cloud

Final thoughts

Overall I really like the Guardzilla 360 camera, and almost all of the things I would like to see improved could probably be addressed in future app updates. Guardzilla really seems to be on top of things also as they updated the app a couple of times while I was doing this review.

Price: $199.99
Where to buy: BestBuy
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Guardzilla

Filed in categories: Reviews

Tagged:

Guardzilla 360 Outdoor All-In-One HD Camera review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on July 17, 2018 at 11:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

With the Ring Spotlight security cam, you can see them before they see you!


NEWS – As I continue to try to build my new DIY cost-effective security system, I really want to preserve the ability for it to integrate with my smart devices, and with new smart devices when they become available. Recently, I wrote a news story about the Ring Alarm Home Security System, which I really like and plan to try if I get my hands on one. However, what I did notice was that the starter kit does not come with a security camera. Since I would need to start with at least one camera, I went in search of something that would integrate with the Ring Alarm Home Security System, and I found the Ring Spotlight Cam Battery HD Security Camera with Built Two-Way Talk and a Siren Alarm.

I really like that this security camera works with Alexa for voice control and that it also has a built-in 2-way talk feature that allows you hear and speak with the folks on the other end. It has spotlights on each side that provide adequate light for the recording that starts as soon as motion is detected, and the lights should also serve as a deterrent. Just in case more evidence is needed for an intruder to flee, there is a built-in 110-decibel siren that if integrated with the Ring alarm system, should mean that two 110 decibel sirens sound at the same time. The camera promises to be an easy DIY setup, and it is compatible with IOS and Android mobile devices, and Mac and Windows PCs.

If you would like to purchase the Ring Spotlight Cam Battery HD Security Camera, it is available on Amazon for $199.

The post With the Ring Spotlight security cam, you can see them before they see you! appeared first on The Gadgeteer.

Filed in categories: News

Tagged:

With the Ring Spotlight security cam, you can see them before they see you! originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on July 8, 2018 at 8:12 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.