Remote home security systems?

   / Remote home security systems? #11  
For remote temperature monitoring and control try a smart thermostat like this.

Honeywell Wi-Fi 7-Day Programmable Thermostat:Amazon:Home Improvement

You'll need an always on router to connect it to and then you can check in remotely with a smartphone.

You can also look for a sensor to detect water in the basement or other location. You can also get a drop cam.

Oh, you can get alerts for these as well.

We monitored our weekend farm for 20 years using home automation software (Home Automation Systems - HomeSeer), x-10 hardware, plus lots of cameras and wired sensors. I have a computer science background and built the required systems. Today, if you have an Internet connection you can easily install all kinds of monitors and cameras you can access from anywhere, including your smart phone. You don't need to have a degree in computer science, but you do need to be comfortable with all kinds of technology (computer software, networking, wiring and home automation protocols (like X-10, Zwave, Insteon, etc.)) if you are not going to use a turn-key system.

We moved to the farm 4 years ago and still use the monitoring system both when we are here and when we are traveling. I think that to get a real return on your investment I'd start by building a system that you use all year long. For example, our driveway alert is probably my wife's favorite feature. We live back in the woods and are never surprised when a vehicle enters are driveway. When we are away, I get an email telling me that that the alert has triggered. I can then view the security cameras. Lots of other things happen depending on the time of day (the place lights up like a stadium if it is night time). But from a security standpoint, I think my wife loves it more for when she is by herself. Never a surprise knock at the door.

As suggested, HVAC monitoring is simple these days and is useful year-round. I got started in home automation in the late 1980s because I wanted to turn the heat up at the weekend farm house before we arrived so my wife wasn't cooking with her coat on. It required programming and electronic skills back then, but all you need today is a WiFi router. Again, this is another good year-round tool.

Security cameras have changed drastically with the addition of Web enabled, low cost cameras. You can be monitor one of these cameras within a few minutes of opening the box. If becomes more complicated if you want to record and save images, but is more a matter of cost than anything. I'd set up a couple of cameras to monitor my driveway and doorways as just part of a general security system.

When you get comfortable with a couple of simple projects (like the thermostat and some cameras), I'd really recommend considering adding a 24/7 computer and home automation software (like HomeSeer) to allow you to tie it all together. That computer/monitoring software is a big part of what you are paying for with a monthly service fee.

And finally, if you don't have a full automatic standby generator, I'd get one. If you don't have power, monitoring by you or a company isn't going to work. I was able to let the utility company know that we had a power outage while in the Virgin Islands. My system notified me when the generator started running.

Good luck!
 
   / Remote home security systems? #12  
Just want to second that with the current universe of low-cost IP cams, this is dead simple to do and not very expensive.

The vendor I use is Foscam (foscam.us) but there are plenty of others out there. Foscam also sells the Blue Iris software which is about $40 (or maybe less) and from my experience is the best of the monitoring products. It monitors your cameras, detects motion and records video clips of it, and if you have a decent internet connection you can monitor and manage it it all remotely. It also has an app that is very good, for smartphone use. If the internet connection at the place you're monitoring is good enough, you don't even have to have BlueIris running on site... you could have it running at your place in Florida managing your cameras back home. The hardest thing about the setup IMO is opening ports on your router to remotely access the cameras or the BlueIris server

So my recommendation is to get a few IP cameras and control them with BlueIris. As a further tip, set up the BlueIris so that the folder where it stores your video clips is a cloud folder (like dropbox) so if someone steals the monitoring computer, you still have the clips.
 
   / Remote home security systems? #14  
My Father owns a security company out of Poughkeepsie NY and we have a camp upstate in old forge region with one of our systems in it. We also alarm Frankies taste of italy up there if your familiar. Full camera system etc. The name of the company is Automatic Alarm Services 845-452-2221. Def not the cheapest but all hardwired so very low maintenance and family company. You can also PM me if your close by. We have a number of ways to get signal out but as previously mention cell service is easiest.
 
   / Remote home security systems? #15  
   / Remote home security systems?
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Thanks for sharing your experience Barry. True, things have come a long way with respect to user friendliness. I have setup a couple of simple TRENDNet cams and it was enough to make me want to incorporate a more robust, overall system.

We've got stand-alone gas generators but have been thinking about a whole house system for some time as well. Just need to get it done...

We monitored our weekend farm for 20 years using home automation software (Home Automation Systems - HomeSeer), x-10 hardware, plus lots of cameras and wired sensors. I have a computer science background and built the required systems. Today, if you have an Internet connection you can easily install all kinds of monitors and cameras you can access from anywhere, including your smart phone. You don't need to have a degree in computer science, but you do need to be comfortable with all kinds of technology (computer software, networking, wiring and home automation protocols (like X-10, Zwave, Insteon, etc.)) if you are not going to use a turn-key system.

We moved to the farm 4 years ago and still use the monitoring system both when we are here and when we are traveling. I think that to get a real return on your investment I'd start by building a system that you use all year long. For example, our driveway alert is probably my wife's favorite feature. We live back in the woods and are never surprised when a vehicle enters are driveway. When we are away, I get an email telling me that that the alert has triggered. I can then view the security cameras. Lots of other things happen depending on the time of day (the place lights up like a stadium if it is night time). But from a security standpoint, I think my wife loves it more for when she is by herself. Never a surprise knock at the door.

As suggested, HVAC monitoring is simple these days and is useful year-round. I got started in home automation in the late 1980s because I wanted to turn the heat up at the weekend farm house before we arrived so my wife wasn't cooking with her coat on. It required programming and electronic skills back then, but all you need today is a WiFi router. Again, this is another good year-round tool.

Security cameras have changed drastically with the addition of Web enabled, low cost cameras. You can be monitor one of these cameras within a few minutes of opening the box. If becomes more complicated if you want to record and save images, but is more a matter of cost than anything. I'd set up a couple of cameras to monitor my driveway and doorways as just part of a general security system.

When you get comfortable with a couple of simple projects (like the thermostat and some cameras), I'd really recommend considering adding a 24/7 computer and home automation software (like HomeSeer) to allow you to tie it all together. That computer/monitoring software is a big part of what you are paying for with a monthly service fee.

And finally, if you don't have a full automatic standby generator, I'd get one. If you don't have power, monitoring by you or a company isn't going to work. I was able to let the utility company know that we had a power outage while in the Virgin Islands. My system notified me when the generator started running.

Good luck!
 
   / Remote home security systems?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Hi Geek,

As I mentioned, I have set up a couple of TRENDNet wireless IP cams. Pretty basic but they work well. TRENDNet includes their own software-- TRENDnetView Pro which I expect is similar to the Blue Iris you mention? I'm pretty comfortable setting up network devices, configuring routers and such so the monitoring software's doing the job for now. Plus they have an Android app that I use to view the cameras via their servers. Might ultimately go to a dedicated computer that I can access remotely myself but think I'll explore what the current system can do before making that decision.

Just want to second that with the current universe of low-cost IP cams, this is dead simple to do and not very expensive.

The vendor I use is Foscam (foscam.us) but there are plenty of others out there. Foscam also sells the Blue Iris software which is about $40 (or maybe less) and from my experience is the best of the monitoring products. It monitors your cameras, detects motion and records video clips of it, and if you have a decent internet connection you can monitor and manage it it all remotely. It also has an app that is very good, for smartphone use. If the internet connection at the place you're monitoring is good enough, you don't even have to have BlueIris running on site... you could have it running at your place in Florida managing your cameras back home. The hardest thing about the setup IMO is opening ports on your router to remotely access the cameras or the BlueIris server

So my recommendation is to get a few IP cameras and control them with BlueIris. As a further tip, set up the BlueIris so that the folder where it stores your video clips is a cloud folder (like dropbox) so if someone steals the monitoring computer, you still have the clips.
 
   / Remote home security systems? #19  
Hi Geek,

As I mentioned, I have set up a couple of TRENDNet wireless IP cams. Pretty basic but they work well. TRENDNet includes their own software-- TRENDnetView Pro which I expect is similar to the Blue Iris you mention? I'm pretty comfortable setting up network devices, configuring routers and such so the monitoring software's doing the job for now. Plus they have an Android app that I use to view the cameras via their servers. Might ultimately go to a dedicated computer that I can access remotely myself but think I'll explore what the current system can do before making that decision.

The key thing I had to do to make the system reliable was run the BlueIris server as a service, not just a program running. That causes it to start automatically when the system reboots, for example because of windows updates.

I'm sure it would work the same way with the Trendnet software.

My "dedicated" computer is a spare 4-5 year old HP laptop. I've found that you don't need that much power to run this system. And because it's a laptop it has a battery so power outages of a couple of hours don't bring it down (obviously the cameras and wifi don't work during the outage, but when the power comes back at least the system recovers since the laptop never shut down. A power outage long enough to drain the laptop battery would probably require manual recovery, but it's never happened yet, at least not when I was away).

The real power of the Blue Iris software is the recording and DVR control features. You can "mask" parts of the camera view so that movement under the mask doesn't trigger recording... real handy for cutting down the number of clips of tree shadows moving or flags flapping during bright, windy days. Lots of similar programming features. Trendnet may have that too, I don't know but worth looking into.
 
   / Remote home security systems? #20  
Every time I decide to take the dive and invest in video surveillance, I find really mixed reviews of the hardware, software or both for the product I choose. I then waive off. I really need this service, am handy, but not a certified MS OS practitioner.

Look at the reviews of Blue Iris in Amazon as an example. Some (like Country Geek) love it, some have real problems with it. It's tough for me to lay down a thousand or two for something I'll need full connectivity and lots of luck to implement if I'm like the 2/5ths of reviewers who are 1-2 star.

Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Foscam Blue Iris Professional Surveillance Software - Up to 64 Cameras, SMS/Text Message Alerts, H.264 Encoding, Supports most major IP Camera brands and CCTV Systems

How do I get an POE camera set-up for indoor, outdoor that records events well and can restart on its own after power burbles?

Thanks, looking for help on this one.
 

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