"IP Camera" - Dealextreme cheapie. WORKS.
Posted: Fri Dec 24, 2010 10:44 am
I got one of these;
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.41929
No branding anywhere.
$57 us (About £38 uk)
Features: IR LED's. DDNS. (Untested) Um, that's it.
Usual long delivery (5 weeks, but it's xmas, usually 3).
Plug is US, but it's 5vdc and I used a poe splitter. Also some axis and y-cam adapters will work. It's the larger of the standard power sockets.
No paper manual, only tiny cd with manual for the camera and supplied 4-cam viewing software. (Not used)
Shows up on DHCP fine, but prompts for user/pass. This information is not given in any documentation.
However, the CD also contains a windows executable which locates the camera by ARP fine, and allows you to do some of the configuration, including setting user/pass remotely. (Insecure since you can change pass without knowing it first!) You can also remove prompt entirely by setting username and password blank. It allows for you to manually set the IP here too.
Note: There does not appear to be any way of changing this password or the settings EXCEPT using this Windows tool. If you're linux only, you're going to have to play with Wine or borrow a winbox.
Web UI very sparse. Size buttons and quality on left, that's about it.
Biggest problem is it's not MJPG as advertised. It's JPG only and the web wrapper uses javascript to refresh constantly. This means it doesn't allow you to stream to a montage with <IMG> tags.
However, zoneminder works ok.
Source tab:
Remote method: Simple
Remote hostname: IP address. If using authentication, preceed with user:pass@. Ie: admin:password@192.168.0.1
Remote host port: 80
Remote host path: /image.jpg
Colours: 24 bit colour
Width: 640
Height: 480
Picture quality is average to good. I haven't yet tested infra red, but there seems to be no option to disable them unlike Y-cam etc.
It claims an fps of up to 30, but it's probably half that. It does serve multiple clients ok though. I'm running on 3fps for other reasons.
Mounting bracket pretty flimsy and hard to tighten up. Looks like a standard thread so would fit others. DX also sell a more rigid stand for $2.97 (29605)
Overall: Cheap and cheerful. No idea on reliability yet.
But - it does work with ZM and if you're on a very tight budget it could do the trick.
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.41929
No branding anywhere.
$57 us (About £38 uk)
Features: IR LED's. DDNS. (Untested) Um, that's it.
Usual long delivery (5 weeks, but it's xmas, usually 3).
Plug is US, but it's 5vdc and I used a poe splitter. Also some axis and y-cam adapters will work. It's the larger of the standard power sockets.
No paper manual, only tiny cd with manual for the camera and supplied 4-cam viewing software. (Not used)
Shows up on DHCP fine, but prompts for user/pass. This information is not given in any documentation.
However, the CD also contains a windows executable which locates the camera by ARP fine, and allows you to do some of the configuration, including setting user/pass remotely. (Insecure since you can change pass without knowing it first!) You can also remove prompt entirely by setting username and password blank. It allows for you to manually set the IP here too.
Note: There does not appear to be any way of changing this password or the settings EXCEPT using this Windows tool. If you're linux only, you're going to have to play with Wine or borrow a winbox.
Web UI very sparse. Size buttons and quality on left, that's about it.
Biggest problem is it's not MJPG as advertised. It's JPG only and the web wrapper uses javascript to refresh constantly. This means it doesn't allow you to stream to a montage with <IMG> tags.
However, zoneminder works ok.
Source tab:
Remote method: Simple
Remote hostname: IP address. If using authentication, preceed with user:pass@. Ie: admin:password@192.168.0.1
Remote host port: 80
Remote host path: /image.jpg
Colours: 24 bit colour
Width: 640
Height: 480
Picture quality is average to good. I haven't yet tested infra red, but there seems to be no option to disable them unlike Y-cam etc.
It claims an fps of up to 30, but it's probably half that. It does serve multiple clients ok though. I'm running on 3fps for other reasons.
Mounting bracket pretty flimsy and hard to tighten up. Looks like a standard thread so would fit others. DX also sell a more rigid stand for $2.97 (29605)
Overall: Cheap and cheerful. No idea on reliability yet.
But - it does work with ZM and if you're on a very tight budget it could do the trick.