Lets talk “Security”………..

Bmyers

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
Grand L3560 with LA805 loader, EA 55" Wicked Grapple, SBX72 BB, LP 1272 mower
May 27, 2019
3,498
4,431
113
Southern Illinois
We have Wyze camera and floodlight. You can add features for additional money, but we just want the basic, which is free and it sends an alert to our phone when it detects a person and saves a short video to the SD card. We can watch the camera live from our phone/internet and turn the floodlights on and off.

They are easy to setup and my wife, who loves her chickens, have three cameras (non-floodlights) setup in the chicken coop and runs, so she can watch her chickens. Plus these cameras move around (yes, she loves her chickens).
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user

Daferris

Well-known member

Equipment
LX2610
Nov 23, 2021
486
409
63
Mid-Michigan
Might be more than what you're willing to spend but look into ubiquity.
www.ubnt.com
My Internet infrastructure and all my security cameras are there stuff. All too notch commercial grade equipment.
Been using them for more than 10 years.
 
  • Love
Reactions: 1 user

xrocketengineer

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
BX1880, FEL, Grapple, 36 in. Forks, 48in. MMM, Quick Spade, Ripper
Nov 14, 2020
847
799
93
Merritt Island, Florida
I am cheap, I went with Foscam. The cameras are alright, one of my cameras is at least 10 years old. The PC software takes some learning. However, if you use the PC software (VMS for Windows or Apple), you can set up the cameras and monitor them remotely with a PC without the need of a Foscam account. In my case I have 4 cameras on the same network plus there is another one in my wife's condo on the beach that I can manage and monitor from my PC with a local account. But if I want to use the Foscam app on my phone, then I have to use a free Foscam account. The cloud recording is optional but not free. I bought the cameras one at a time as it became somewhat of a hobby. Only the oldest camera has no SD card capability. The last purchase was the Foscam NVR and that kind of sucks. It does record ok but it wants to override whatever settings you might have in each individual camera and it almost ignores the oldest camera. The VMS software and the NVR don't play well together, so it takes some effort to get them to do what I want.
 

Runs With Scissors

Well-known member

Equipment
L2501 TLB , Grappel, Brush Hog, Box Blade, Ballast box, Forks, Tiller, PH digger
Jan 25, 2023
3,338
4,234
113
Michigan
ROFL! Cornfused yet?
OMG……you said it brother…………Lots of stuff to consider.

Hell, I'm having a hard time just keep up with the all the damn letters….NVR, UPS, DVD, LGBTQ…... ROTFLMFAO……..

Well this has become “interesting"…..and I thank everyone for their input……I’m gonna have to dive a little deeper into this.




Reolink seems to be a “big player” in this market, but there is certainly no shortage of “players” for sure.

So does anyone know if you can just add a “aftermarket” external hard drive to “upgrade” the recorders from 2TB to “whatever”? Or are these systems typically “proprietary”?
 

Hugo Habicht

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
G1900
Jun 24, 2024
948
1,334
93
Ireland
Reolink seems to be a “big player” in this market, but there is certainly no shortage of “players” for sure.
The emphasis is on "seems". When searching on the internet you may get this impression.

When I searched what system to buy I had the same impression initially. Then I came across a security systems forum which is used a lot by professional installers. They had nothing good to say about Reolink products.

After reading that I went back to reviews on various web sites and I noticed that people that gave them positive reviews had only done one product review. People with negative feedback stated the reasons and had done various product reviews in the past.

So it looks to me if Reolink has lots of people working on manipulating search results and product feedback instead on working on product quality.

I said it before: the two big players are Hikvision and Dahua. Yes, both Chinese companies, I have no problem with that. Their software is mainly open source (due to underlying Linux operating system). The source code for my NVR from Dahua is available from them. They play with open cards unlike companies in other countries (I only mention Edward Snowden here ;) ). And if Xi Jinping thinks he has to watch my cat in the garage or in the garden, so what? And when I am in the house it is easy to stop recording or external internet access using an ethernet disconnect switch. Running "wireshark" to check ethernet traffic did not reveal any suspicious activity yet.

Wrt to your last question: my Dahua NVR accepts any SATA hard drive, nothing proprietary there. I am using server disks due to the frequent access.
 
Last edited: