slag
Lifer
- Dec 14, 2000
- 10,473
- 81
- 101
I didn't even think that was a serious answer (missing the *bazinga*?). How would they follow in-wall wiring, short of ripping it out of the walls themselves?
Spider bots or replicators.. duh..
I didn't even think that was a serious answer (missing the *bazinga*?). How would they follow in-wall wiring, short of ripping it out of the walls themselves?
Yes you do, unless you're a moron and have a wire hanging from the soffit or outside wall plugged into an extension running all the way to wherever an outside plug is. Not only will this be super easy for a thief to disable, if the power goes out the camera dies. Or if you're using an outside plug, which should be GFCI protected, it could trip due to another reason, and also takeout the camera. The wiring should be going from the camera directly inside the house or at very least outside of plain view. So you have to drill holes and run power anyway. May as well just make it cat5/6 and have it run to a POE switch that is on UPS power. Much cleaner install too and a centralized point.
Running wires is not hard depending on the house. I have a single story house and it was very easy. Run the wires through the attic, punch a hole where i need the camera through the overhang and run the the wires down one wall where the NVR is. Probably took 2 hours to run 6 cameras. Put one inside and punched a small hole in the ceiling. It's really not hard.
Maybe instead of purchasing a security system you could put that money into living somewhere that isn't shit?
You shouldn't accept things like that as fact.There are thieves everywhere, it's a fact of life.
You shouldn't accept things like that as fact.
They're not.
I agree somewhat. Power is a problem and also with CCTV over wifi, you should consider the security of the camera itself. (many models probably have backdoors that could be hacked where wired systems are less likely to have exploits...or at least have fewer points of access)
When I priced a system, I was going to go the POE route, but got bummed because the POE switches run at a premium (though some were in the $100 range)...then decent cameras plus NAS devices all run into more money. I ended up opting for a $200ish 4 camera system by QSee that I got for $99 after a coupon....I couldn't beat it.
If I wanted to go POE, I'd check Ubiquiti and there are POE injectors.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/8-Ports-Pas...525?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2a456e993d
Just research the cameras before putting up the money...there are a lot of standards and a lot of proprietary signals. It's important to start with the software and or method of image/footage storage/retention before you buy your cameras instead of doing it the other way around.
You have to run power to them anyway.Why not just make them POE? Been looking at cameras and it seems only a small fraction are wired and POE. Just seems odd. Not to mention the security implications of wireless. Once someone manages to find a way to quickly crack WPA2 it will render all of these obsolete. Been looking at security cameras and not finding much as far as wired POE.
I can recommend it. This has superb picture quality and works just fine. The main concern with these cameras is that they are far more difficult to get up and running than something like Dropcam.
A statement with no merit at all. Maybe instead of getting home owners' insurance you should stop setting your house on fire? Things happen. I live in an exceedingly safe area but I like cameras because they are awesome.Maybe instead of purchasing a security system you could put that money into living somewhere that isn't shit?
Amazon has a nice 8 port switch (4 POE) for about $45. Been running it for a very long time.POE switches run at a premium
Wireless security camera is an oxymoron. Insecure security creates way more problems than solved. Why do people install them? Because they are cheap and widely available. As I write this two of my neighbors cameras are wide open.
And they do the job for common criminals. Most people aren't trying to stop a team of CIA spooks who could jam the signal, they're trying to stop some ghetto thug from breaking through a window, or at least capture them after the fact. Wireless cameras, especially ones that automatically upload to the cloud, are perfectly suited for that.
Camera won't do that......
They usually dress in a way that's it's next to impossible to determine who they are.
The only thing you can hope for is to set of alert to you > call cops and them getting there in time to catch him.
That's about it....
