Camera project
+3
CanuckBob
espíritu del lago
Intercasa
7 posters
Camera project
So I upgraded my security camera and while looking at related items will put 2 more up to look up and down my street, will even try recording at night (cams have night vision) and then will make one live on the internet 24 hours a day just for kicks. Anybody else done this and have any tips, tricks or commentary?
Intercasa- Share Holder
- Posts : 3006
Join date : 2010-04-05
Age : 54
Location : Chapala / Zapopan
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Re: Camera project
Steve Brtx and Sparks are techies, maybe they will chime in!
Spencer, I applaud you in your endeavor and best of luck.
Spencer, I applaud you in your endeavor and best of luck.
espíritu del lago- Share Holder
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Join date : 2010-04-05
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Re: Camera project
Ooh, that ought to be downright educational. Lizzy
bobnliz- Share Holder
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Join date : 2010-04-05
Location : Colorado/Mexico
Humor : wry ans dry
Re: Camera project
The problems I had were mainly that I could not see the cam via the Internet URL to check it. Could only see it thru the monitor software or the cam itself. I had to post a link and ask others if they could see the live stream.
My D-Link cam had it's own web server but was a sub-IP address of my Telmex IP so could not figure how to configure it to be seen. A built in web server may also not be what you want to present on a web page.
I ended up using WebcamXP running off my computer (free software for one cam - pay if you have more than one). WebcamXP can stream or FTP single shots to your website. Single shots are easy to configure as they are like any foto on a page. Streaming requires code (Flash or Java) that WebcamXP provides. Running WebcamXP streaming on my PC also took up 20-30% of my CPU and with few people watching it didn't make sense.
The last issue was with a dynamic changing IP. I had to use DynDNS as a constant address. A free account with them gives you a constant URL that is updated by a client running on your PC.
Well ... one more thing. WebcanXP requires you open various ports on your router so I assume any cam requires at least one. Open port means people can "see in"
My D-Link cam had it's own web server but was a sub-IP address of my Telmex IP so could not figure how to configure it to be seen. A built in web server may also not be what you want to present on a web page.
I ended up using WebcamXP running off my computer (free software for one cam - pay if you have more than one). WebcamXP can stream or FTP single shots to your website. Single shots are easy to configure as they are like any foto on a page. Streaming requires code (Flash or Java) that WebcamXP provides. Running WebcamXP streaming on my PC also took up 20-30% of my CPU and with few people watching it didn't make sense.
The last issue was with a dynamic changing IP. I had to use DynDNS as a constant address. A free account with them gives you a constant URL that is updated by a client running on your PC.
Well ... one more thing. WebcanXP requires you open various ports on your router so I assume any cam requires at least one. Open port means people can "see in"
Re: Camera project
Someone else put one up. An FTP foto uploaded every 10 minutes
http://maztravel.com/chapala/view.html
http://maztravel.com/chapala/view.html
Re: Camera project
You could also contact Senor Fox at http://www.ourvallarta.com
He streams live from his Cafe Roma in PV ...and he's a techie from Canada...perhaps he could help.
He streams live from his Cafe Roma in PV ...and he's a techie from Canada...perhaps he could help.
ferret- Share Holder
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