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  3. Can recommend Wyze Cams

Can recommend Wyze Cams

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  • H honey the codewitch

    I hear you can update the Wyze Cam 2's firmware to custom firmware that expands the capabilities and allows you to do things for free you normally would have to pay for. Like the AI features. However, I have a Wyze Cam 3. No custom firmware, but the out of the box features are great. It's indoor outdoor, WiFi and SD, and you can view your history, do motion detection, audio (two way, I think), and alarms. You can also configure rules for all of it. It works with Alexa. They thought of most everything. The main downside is Android or iOS only so if you want to run it on a PC you'll need something like Win11 and Windows Subsystem for Android, plus sideloading a google play store APK. It's kind of a hassle. Or you can use Bluestack. It's still a bit of a hassle. I use WSA because I like all of my apps to look native. I use WSL too. Anyway, once set up, they are great little devices.

    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Roger Wright
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    I've been using Samsung Wisenet cameras for years, and they're really hard to use - perhaps that's because the people who write the manuals don't understand English. What I've been able to establish is that, the systems can do great things, but none of those functions are accessible from any remote point. You actually have to stand in front of the DVR box with the remote and a keyboard to look back at recorded images! Can't do it from the PC or phone apps. I hate to waste money on yet another system, but I need to be able to fully control everything from a remote location. Maybe Wyze can fill the bill...

    Will Rogers never met me.

    H 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • R Roger Wright

      I've been using Samsung Wisenet cameras for years, and they're really hard to use - perhaps that's because the people who write the manuals don't understand English. What I've been able to establish is that, the systems can do great things, but none of those functions are accessible from any remote point. You actually have to stand in front of the DVR box with the remote and a keyboard to look back at recorded images! Can't do it from the PC or phone apps. I hate to waste money on yet another system, but I need to be able to fully control everything from a remote location. Maybe Wyze can fill the bill...

      Will Rogers never met me.

      H Offline
      H Offline
      honey the codewitch
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      The apps for wyze are all mobile, so yeah - it sounds like it will get you closer at least.

      To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

      R 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • H honey the codewitch

        I hear you can update the Wyze Cam 2's firmware to custom firmware that expands the capabilities and allows you to do things for free you normally would have to pay for. Like the AI features. However, I have a Wyze Cam 3. No custom firmware, but the out of the box features are great. It's indoor outdoor, WiFi and SD, and you can view your history, do motion detection, audio (two way, I think), and alarms. You can also configure rules for all of it. It works with Alexa. They thought of most everything. The main downside is Android or iOS only so if you want to run it on a PC you'll need something like Win11 and Windows Subsystem for Android, plus sideloading a google play store APK. It's kind of a hassle. Or you can use Bluestack. It's still a bit of a hassle. I use WSA because I like all of my apps to look native. I use WSL too. Anyway, once set up, they are great little devices.

        To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

        1 Offline
        1 Offline
        1650
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        I've been happliy using Wansview Q5 Wifi/ethernet indoor cameras. meh optics, 2k resolution. Pan, and tilt, micro sd slot. Very stable. Affordable on Amazon. They must make all their money from cloud services, Cannot imagine how they could otherwise profit selling the hardware so cheaply, dunno, I don't subscribe. Decent functional, basic Android app, adjustable motion sensing and alerts, two way coms, etc. Even more 'basic' mostly functional windows app. I may fire up my rountoit, and look into using blue iris one of these days

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • H honey the codewitch

          I hear you can update the Wyze Cam 2's firmware to custom firmware that expands the capabilities and allows you to do things for free you normally would have to pay for. Like the AI features. However, I have a Wyze Cam 3. No custom firmware, but the out of the box features are great. It's indoor outdoor, WiFi and SD, and you can view your history, do motion detection, audio (two way, I think), and alarms. You can also configure rules for all of it. It works with Alexa. They thought of most everything. The main downside is Android or iOS only so if you want to run it on a PC you'll need something like Win11 and Windows Subsystem for Android, plus sideloading a google play store APK. It's kind of a hassle. Or you can use Bluestack. It's still a bit of a hassle. I use WSA because I like all of my apps to look native. I use WSL too. Anyway, once set up, they are great little devices.

          To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

          A Offline
          A Offline
          Awy Naibaho Saut Naibaho
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          Halo...meski sedikit lambat,saya mencoba menanggapi pendapat anda. Sangat setuju dengan apa yang anda katakan terkait rincian produk saran anda. Jujur saja,online saya hingga kedetik ini,hanya mobile android tua yang mampu saya miliki untuk kegunaan hari-hari kehidupan online saya... Silakan baca sedikit info bio saya >>> g.dev/GilasCyber atau silakan buka rss/xml avatar saya berikut >>> ms.gravatar.com/awynaibaho.xml itu mengapa saya selalu berharap sesuatu yang bisa saya dapatkan dengan cara gratis/cuma-cuma,dan itu sungguh sagat menyakitkan.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • H honey the codewitch

            I hear you can update the Wyze Cam 2's firmware to custom firmware that expands the capabilities and allows you to do things for free you normally would have to pay for. Like the AI features. However, I have a Wyze Cam 3. No custom firmware, but the out of the box features are great. It's indoor outdoor, WiFi and SD, and you can view your history, do motion detection, audio (two way, I think), and alarms. You can also configure rules for all of it. It works with Alexa. They thought of most everything. The main downside is Android or iOS only so if you want to run it on a PC you'll need something like Win11 and Windows Subsystem for Android, plus sideloading a google play store APK. It's kind of a hassle. Or you can use Bluestack. It's still a bit of a hassle. I use WSA because I like all of my apps to look native. I use WSL too. Anyway, once set up, they are great little devices.

            To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

            M Offline
            M Offline
            MikeCO10
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            Meh, I have a love-hate relationship with them. Innovative and inexpensive, but inconsistent across their product lines. At times, they seem to be trying to do too much with too little resources. That could be a function of maintaining the lower price points. Project management uses the fire and squirrel process. Ok, we all probably do to some degree, well, I do :) , but sometimes the squirrels seem to rule with Wyze and the company is large enough to do otherwise. Pick and choose products based on their forum comments.

            H 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • M MikeCO10

              Meh, I have a love-hate relationship with them. Innovative and inexpensive, but inconsistent across their product lines. At times, they seem to be trying to do too much with too little resources. That could be a function of maintaining the lower price points. Project management uses the fire and squirrel process. Ok, we all probably do to some degree, well, I do :) , but sometimes the squirrels seem to rule with Wyze and the company is large enough to do otherwise. Pick and choose products based on their forum comments.

              H Offline
              H Offline
              honey the codewitch
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              That's good to know. I think the Wyze Cam 3, and I've heard the Wyze Cam 2 are decent in terms of all that, although their "HD" isn't true HD as far as I can tell. However, with a firmware patch (I thought it only applied to v2 but Chris Maunder wrote an article about "downgrading" the v3) you can get direct streaming back onto the device. There's a standard protocol it supports for it, Rsomething I forget. Anyway, at that point you can use it with 3rd party software, including your own - at least as I understand things.

              To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • H honey the codewitch

                I hear you can update the Wyze Cam 2's firmware to custom firmware that expands the capabilities and allows you to do things for free you normally would have to pay for. Like the AI features. However, I have a Wyze Cam 3. No custom firmware, but the out of the box features are great. It's indoor outdoor, WiFi and SD, and you can view your history, do motion detection, audio (two way, I think), and alarms. You can also configure rules for all of it. It works with Alexa. They thought of most everything. The main downside is Android or iOS only so if you want to run it on a PC you'll need something like Win11 and Windows Subsystem for Android, plus sideloading a google play store APK. It's kind of a hassle. Or you can use Bluestack. It's still a bit of a hassle. I use WSA because I like all of my apps to look native. I use WSL too. Anyway, once set up, they are great little devices.

                To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                T Offline
                T Offline
                tc8596
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                I really like the hardware, and I despise the software. Image quality is great, size of the camera and low-light image is amazing. They introduced RTSP support in a beta firmware a few years ago, which let folks with BlueIris and other software access the camera's video feed. Then they pulled it from their website saying they didn't have the resources to support that feature alongside everything else. Soon after, they had new subscription services for everyone to sign up for. I think it was a money-grab for their subscription service. Meanwhile, my app usually takes 30 seconds to *try* to load the camera feeds, and half of them don't load. They seem to drop their network connection frequently, even though some are 10 feet from my access point with a clear line-of-sight. I have a few that were downgraded to the firmware that supports RTSP, and those show up instantly in SecuritySpy. The only problem is that the video feed drops every few minutes and then reconnects. But that's still 1,000% better than using their app, where the video usually don't load at all. If they added real RTSP support they could charge twice the money for the camera and sell a lot to folks who don't want to be a part of their cloud. But they seem to be pushing everyone to subscribe and pay them forever for using their cams. I've also spent hours working with support to resolve the problems I have with the app, but no luck. So again...great hardware, terrible software, overall frustrating experience. But I guess many others are happy with what they get.

                H 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • T tc8596

                  I really like the hardware, and I despise the software. Image quality is great, size of the camera and low-light image is amazing. They introduced RTSP support in a beta firmware a few years ago, which let folks with BlueIris and other software access the camera's video feed. Then they pulled it from their website saying they didn't have the resources to support that feature alongside everything else. Soon after, they had new subscription services for everyone to sign up for. I think it was a money-grab for their subscription service. Meanwhile, my app usually takes 30 seconds to *try* to load the camera feeds, and half of them don't load. They seem to drop their network connection frequently, even though some are 10 feet from my access point with a clear line-of-sight. I have a few that were downgraded to the firmware that supports RTSP, and those show up instantly in SecuritySpy. The only problem is that the video feed drops every few minutes and then reconnects. But that's still 1,000% better than using their app, where the video usually don't load at all. If they added real RTSP support they could charge twice the money for the camera and sell a lot to folks who don't want to be a part of their cloud. But they seem to be pushing everyone to subscribe and pay them forever for using their cams. I've also spent hours working with support to resolve the problems I have with the app, but no luck. So again...great hardware, terrible software, overall frustrating experience. But I guess many others are happy with what they get.

                  H Offline
                  H Offline
                  honey the codewitch
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  Chris Maunder wrote an article on Wyze cams that shows you how to get RTSP back :) How to Setup Blue Iris and CodeProject.AI Server on Windows Using a Wyze Cam[^]

                  To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • H honey the codewitch

                    The apps for wyze are all mobile, so yeah - it sounds like it will get you closer at least.

                    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                    R Offline
                    R Offline
                    Roger Wright
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    Thanks for that info, honey tc! I appreciate that, since I'm about to start a new job managing and engineering a utility scale solar project that's 100 miles away. I'm going to have to acquire new housing in that area, and really have to have a way to monitor my main home.

                    Will Rogers never met me.

                    H 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • R Roger Wright

                      Thanks for that info, honey tc! I appreciate that, since I'm about to start a new job managing and engineering a utility scale solar project that's 100 miles away. I'm going to have to acquire new housing in that area, and really have to have a way to monitor my main home.

                      Will Rogers never met me.

                      H Offline
                      H Offline
                      honey the codewitch
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #15

                      Sure thing! Yeah these should be able to remotely monitor because it's all cloudy and stuff. :) You may have to pay for their service to do remote monitoring now, but I don't remember it being expensive - quite the opposite, like $2 a month or something? I could be wrong, I just half remember it.

                      To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

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