They're significantly more expensive and don't offer local recording capability, you have to pay monthly for their cloud DVR service...I've heard they are super easy to setup though for technically challenged and have great phone support so might be worth it if those are desiredCheck out Drop Cam.
https://www.dropcam.com/
They are coming out with a new camera in a few months with IR capability as well, so you might want to wait for that.
If you knew that you were moving to a unsecure place you should have included a professional installation in your budget. DIY is worthless, what will you do with all the feed? Oh! look I caught the burgler on cam!! yeiipiieee!!!. Then what? You think the cops will catch them?
Buy ADT sign and stickers from ebay, you will be better off.
Hey now. Watch your mouth. We've got elderly here.I installed a camera for my home and caught a neighbor dumping trash by my garage. He even started to throw shit on the roof of my garage. Once I saw who was doing it I paid him a visit and he shit his pants. The very next day when I was at work I saw him on cam climbing on my roof and taking all the trash off it. Since then I had no trouble. This was some old fucker in he 60's and I really think this guy was going senile.
So ya this is good for shitty neighbors.
Hey now. Watch your mouth. We've got elderly here.![]()
Check out Drop Cam.
https://www.dropcam.com/
They are coming out with a new camera in a few months with IR capability as well, so you might want to wait for that.
The Cisco WVC80N or Dlink DCS-932L are both inexpensive and good quality options for what you're looking for, they can email you video clips when triggered by motion, I don't know as much about the Cisco but a co-worker has the Dlink and it works great, you can even store video on a NAS..I'm planning to get a couple of them
I've been reading up on these recently. The low-end IP cameras are useless toys that are certain to disappoint (as evidenced by the inability to find any that are uniformly well reviewed). The picture quality of the entry level ones is many times inferior to a webcam of half the price. A megapixel IP camera starts around $300 (e.g. Vivotek 8332) and is worth using.
If you're able to run the cable, a quality USB webcam can give HD pictures and video for $60 (Logitech c910 or Microsoft Lifecam Studio current best pics from what I can tell). Newer webcams have half decent night-vision, but it will certainly be inferior to a good IP camera. Of course, it needs a PC to monitor this, but all the IP cameras other than Mobotix ($700+ I think) do as well; they may have web servers on them but no ability to autonomously respond to events anyway. If you want remote access you may want an IP cam or could run a web server on your managing PC.
If you have CAT already run, you can use a USB camera over CAT5/5e/6, but only at USB 1.1 speeds with a $15-30 USB-over-ethernet extender. If you want USB 2.0, the cheapest I've found is about $300, which is insane. There are people running high-end webcams over USB 1.1 but obviously not with HD video and I have no idea what sacrifices have been met as I've not come across many yet who do it.
I think you want to go wired. Wireless can be flaky and just adds another failure point that isn't likely to occur with wired.
I had been looking mostly at the DCS-932L, 942L, IP422WN and WVC80N...what swayed me was color (will blend better mounting on the ceiling, WVC80N is black), direct NAS recording (I have a NAS in my fire-proof gun safe), mpeg4 file format (the 932L just does mjpeg) and having a little exposure/experience with Dlink already since I have helped a co-worker with his and I've seen the video captures he gets on his phone and they're more than good enough for security purposes. I doubt I'll be using the remote monitoring much, if at all, but it's there if I need it. Once I make sure it all works as I need I'm planning to add 2-3 more...also got one for $110 which is really reasonable. The only real "bad" reviews I've seen on it are from people who can't figure out how to set them up. The IP422WN had all that too but I really didn't need the tilt/pan since it will be just monitoring my front door so I couldn't justify the extra cost and sizeAny particular reason you went with the DCS-942L?
I'm guessing that setup wouldn't have the motion sensing/email video function of the IP based cameras or is there some option for that I don't know about? Of course that would also require an always on computer too I guess...you can get the 932L for just over $90 and I know the image quality on those are good plus you get the other optionsI tried one of those $90 Foscams and rated it very poorly in a review on Amazon. Its picture quality was really poor. Its night vision was actually pretty good and for indoors with its IR would do fine, but wirelessly it would hang from time to time, even next to my router. I also found its website would become unresponsive. I just couldn't trust that it wouldn't let me down. I'm really close to pulling the trigger on a $60 web cam with the iogear USB extender for about $30 and see how those work.
I tried one of those $90 Foscams and rated it very poorly in a review on Amazon. Its picture quality was really poor. Its night vision was actually pretty good and for indoors with its IR would do fine, but wirelessly it would hang from time to time, even next to my router. I also found its website would become unresponsive. I just couldn't trust that it wouldn't let me down.
I'm really close to pulling the trigger on a $60 web cam with the iogear USB extender for about $30 and see how those work.