Using Zoneminder for something other than Security
Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2003 10:52 am
Hi,
I'd thought I would post a little something here about how I plan to use Zoneminder. Maybe what I am trying to do will inspire others in the future.
I'm involved in making a TV documentry covering rare wildlife on a uninhabited island in SE Asia. Our main aim is to have this island included in a national park as there is evidence of Asian Tigers living there. Obviously as the place is so large and the wildlife so illusive we're planning to deploy Zoneminder powered camera traps at key locations. These units will be connected via a 900mhz serial ip network to a basecamp well out of the way. Using cheap 2nd hand laptops, an IR illuminated webcam and some batteries we hope to have day and night coverage for about 5 consecutive days.
Camera traps and fully networkable cameras do indeed exist today, so why am i re-inventing the wheel?
Well, the excellent "cam-trakker", does everything we need apart from one thing. They need to be visited for film changes/image downloads. The area we are covering would mean a 4 day hike in dense jungle just for that.
I've also looked at the Axis 2420 network camera. This is the ideal package as far as i am concerned - apart from the inhibitivly high cost per unit.
My site budget is $600 for everything - so i came up with idea of using the laptop/webcam method.
The other spin on this method is that we will know immediatly when (if) a capture takes place. this is useful for scientific data etc, knowing the animals habits ahead of the real filming schedule.
Part of the script will include some info on the technology we use for certain things, so maybe you'll see the Zoneminder site with that "as seen on tv" comment :)
Anyways, I'll continue posting my progress and eventually some pictures of the unit here (if we're lucky some captures too)- maybe someone out there will be able to offer better suggestions than the ideas i currently have.
So far Zoneminder looks great Philip - I'll start playing with it for real tomorrow so we'll see how it goes.
Cheers
Karl
I'd thought I would post a little something here about how I plan to use Zoneminder. Maybe what I am trying to do will inspire others in the future.
I'm involved in making a TV documentry covering rare wildlife on a uninhabited island in SE Asia. Our main aim is to have this island included in a national park as there is evidence of Asian Tigers living there. Obviously as the place is so large and the wildlife so illusive we're planning to deploy Zoneminder powered camera traps at key locations. These units will be connected via a 900mhz serial ip network to a basecamp well out of the way. Using cheap 2nd hand laptops, an IR illuminated webcam and some batteries we hope to have day and night coverage for about 5 consecutive days.
Camera traps and fully networkable cameras do indeed exist today, so why am i re-inventing the wheel?
Well, the excellent "cam-trakker", does everything we need apart from one thing. They need to be visited for film changes/image downloads. The area we are covering would mean a 4 day hike in dense jungle just for that.
I've also looked at the Axis 2420 network camera. This is the ideal package as far as i am concerned - apart from the inhibitivly high cost per unit.
My site budget is $600 for everything - so i came up with idea of using the laptop/webcam method.
The other spin on this method is that we will know immediatly when (if) a capture takes place. this is useful for scientific data etc, knowing the animals habits ahead of the real filming schedule.
Part of the script will include some info on the technology we use for certain things, so maybe you'll see the Zoneminder site with that "as seen on tv" comment :)
Anyways, I'll continue posting my progress and eventually some pictures of the unit here (if we're lucky some captures too)- maybe someone out there will be able to offer better suggestions than the ideas i currently have.
So far Zoneminder looks great Philip - I'll start playing with it for real tomorrow so we'll see how it goes.
Cheers
Karl