- Mar 15, 2016
- 25
- 2
So, I've had several Foscam and look-alike cameras for a few years, some old, some newer, and eventually I purchased Blue Iris and set it up on it's own desktop, i7 chip, lots of ram, seems to work fairly well for our use, which is everything from that desktop to Ipads, to Androids and laptops.
Our property consists of a large, spread out house, extensive outdoor patios, some outbuildings, and an office building, and my experience has been that, when possible, the cameras are best wired . . . run several wireless though too. Power is not a problem, as have outlets or can put them anywhere I want a camera. I use a few routers as access points, each access point wired to the main router. We have rural wireless wifi, so not really fast. . .in fact, fairly slow with 5 download and 2-3 up (the price we pay for living on acreage I guess.)
So, I am not very knowledgeable about any of this. . . I can set static ip's and forward ports, set up alerts, etc, but when it comes to adding a couple cameras, I'm confused over the posts I read that basically trash Foscam cameras and sing the praises of Hiki, Dahau and others. So I start shopping for a "better brand" and I'm having a hard time finding sub-$350 cameras that have Ethernet connections, ptz controls, zoom, etc that work with Blue Iris and don't require knowledge of a specific foreign language. Since I only have Foscam and similar cameras, I've only compared the F18908W,F18910W,F19816w,F19826w,F19821W, F19831W and a couple of oddball Hama and Wansview. See, told you I don't have variety of experience because, in the past, I chose cheap & easy.
We do use PTZ because many of our cameras are in positions were we rotate them to look at specific areas depending on time of day, type of alert, what wildlife is standing on the patio, etc. We use them to watch for the pizza delivery guy, to alert us when a substitute driver drops a delivery off at our home instead of the office, a few for specific security alerts if someone were to enter an outbuilding containing equipment. . . just all sorts of things, but I don't want to give up PTZ through the software, so I want to make sure my next camera plays nice with Blue Iris.
I access the cameras directly at times, but mostly through the Blue Iris server, using anything from ipads to phones to laptops or desktops. . . from here, from across the country. I use them to see if it really is raining so I know to cancel a job and shift our employee's schedules around, even if I'm working from another state. I have them so my husband can relax knowing his tractor or mower is safe and sound in it's little garage. I can tell if one of the guys came to the house and didn't get my back door closed tight, encouraging a raccoon explorer to check the place out, or maybe I want to see if the red light is flashing on my mousetrap in my shop, meaning I need to get the little vermin out before it's carcass "becomes one with the trap!" If I'm down South and spot snow on my home driveway, I know it's time to suddenly add a few more vacation days to my schedule ;-). If I want to be woke up by an alert on my cell phone, only to watch the video of a giant spider traipse across my camera lens, or of a possum nosing around my front door, I can do that too!
I'd like to be able to zoom a little more. . .maybe be able to see the mailbox across the street and see if the flag is down, meaning the mail has run. I also think I'm having too many problems with loss of signal/connection on the wireless ones, even with better antennas, so I prefer both wired and wireless options on every camera, since I have a tendency to do the round robin camera shuffle, where I put the newest and best in the most useful place, moving the existing to the second most useful place, and that one to the next location, on down the line until the oldest one ends up in the barn or as an armadillo cam or something. (those little buggers are putting their OWN lives at risk when they dare dig up my new plantings in front of a camera and spotlight. . . I swear, if they are THAT dumb........).
Why is it that everyone hates Foscam cameras and brags on the other brands, and yet I can't seem to find ones at a good enough price to fit my needs, and since I have several Foscam indoor cameras under roof overhangs, I don't really seem to have problems with using the indoor ones outside. Of course, I started spraying a circuit board sealer on each circuit board when I purchase a new camera, so is there a real benefit to buying outdoor ones?
Maybe someone wouldn't mind giving me some advice and help me understand the differences better? I do NOT want to run cables, so it's wireless or LAN, preferring LAN where I've got Cat5e...no cctv for this girl. Thanks for any advice, Christy
Our property consists of a large, spread out house, extensive outdoor patios, some outbuildings, and an office building, and my experience has been that, when possible, the cameras are best wired . . . run several wireless though too. Power is not a problem, as have outlets or can put them anywhere I want a camera. I use a few routers as access points, each access point wired to the main router. We have rural wireless wifi, so not really fast. . .in fact, fairly slow with 5 download and 2-3 up (the price we pay for living on acreage I guess.)
So, I am not very knowledgeable about any of this. . . I can set static ip's and forward ports, set up alerts, etc, but when it comes to adding a couple cameras, I'm confused over the posts I read that basically trash Foscam cameras and sing the praises of Hiki, Dahau and others. So I start shopping for a "better brand" and I'm having a hard time finding sub-$350 cameras that have Ethernet connections, ptz controls, zoom, etc that work with Blue Iris and don't require knowledge of a specific foreign language. Since I only have Foscam and similar cameras, I've only compared the F18908W,F18910W,F19816w,F19826w,F19821W, F19831W and a couple of oddball Hama and Wansview. See, told you I don't have variety of experience because, in the past, I chose cheap & easy.
We do use PTZ because many of our cameras are in positions were we rotate them to look at specific areas depending on time of day, type of alert, what wildlife is standing on the patio, etc. We use them to watch for the pizza delivery guy, to alert us when a substitute driver drops a delivery off at our home instead of the office, a few for specific security alerts if someone were to enter an outbuilding containing equipment. . . just all sorts of things, but I don't want to give up PTZ through the software, so I want to make sure my next camera plays nice with Blue Iris.
I access the cameras directly at times, but mostly through the Blue Iris server, using anything from ipads to phones to laptops or desktops. . . from here, from across the country. I use them to see if it really is raining so I know to cancel a job and shift our employee's schedules around, even if I'm working from another state. I have them so my husband can relax knowing his tractor or mower is safe and sound in it's little garage. I can tell if one of the guys came to the house and didn't get my back door closed tight, encouraging a raccoon explorer to check the place out, or maybe I want to see if the red light is flashing on my mousetrap in my shop, meaning I need to get the little vermin out before it's carcass "becomes one with the trap!" If I'm down South and spot snow on my home driveway, I know it's time to suddenly add a few more vacation days to my schedule ;-). If I want to be woke up by an alert on my cell phone, only to watch the video of a giant spider traipse across my camera lens, or of a possum nosing around my front door, I can do that too!
I'd like to be able to zoom a little more. . .maybe be able to see the mailbox across the street and see if the flag is down, meaning the mail has run. I also think I'm having too many problems with loss of signal/connection on the wireless ones, even with better antennas, so I prefer both wired and wireless options on every camera, since I have a tendency to do the round robin camera shuffle, where I put the newest and best in the most useful place, moving the existing to the second most useful place, and that one to the next location, on down the line until the oldest one ends up in the barn or as an armadillo cam or something. (those little buggers are putting their OWN lives at risk when they dare dig up my new plantings in front of a camera and spotlight. . . I swear, if they are THAT dumb........).
Why is it that everyone hates Foscam cameras and brags on the other brands, and yet I can't seem to find ones at a good enough price to fit my needs, and since I have several Foscam indoor cameras under roof overhangs, I don't really seem to have problems with using the indoor ones outside. Of course, I started spraying a circuit board sealer on each circuit board when I purchase a new camera, so is there a real benefit to buying outdoor ones?
Maybe someone wouldn't mind giving me some advice and help me understand the differences better? I do NOT want to run cables, so it's wireless or LAN, preferring LAN where I've got Cat5e...no cctv for this girl. Thanks for any advice, Christy