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TRENDnet SecurView Wireless Internet Surveillance Camera TV-IP110W (Silver) |  | Brand: Trendware Category: Photography
List Price: $125.99 Buy New: $79.99 as of 7/30/2010 16:47 CDT details You Save: $46.00 (37%)
New (37) Used (4) from $75.00
Seller: Seacoast Consumer Electronics Rating: 56 reviews
Format: CD Platform: Windows Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Operating System: Windows CPU Manufacturer: Intel CPU Speed: 1 CPU Type: AMD Athlon Processors: 1 System Memory: 128000 Memory Type: DRAM Hard Drive Size: 1 Graphics Card: This is the description of the PC Graphics Graphics RAM: 256 Graphics Card Interface: AGP Native Resolution: 640x480 Display Size: 669.2913385826772 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 3.9 x 2.7 x 3 Legal Disclaimer: Shipping is 3-5 days FedEx or UPS with tracking number. Brand New. Continental USA street address ONLY, we do not ship to P/O box, APO, AE, or international addresses Warranty: 3 years warranty
MPN: TV-IP110W Model: TV-IP110W UPC: 790069296406 EAN: 0710931303384 ASIN: B00125KR1E
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Quick Universal Plug and Play installation | | • | Supports TCP/IP networking, SMTP Email, HTTP, and other Internet protocols | | • | High quality MJPEG video recording with up to 30frames per second | | • | Record streaming video to your computer | | • | Motion detection with Email notification |
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Product Description The Wireless Internet Camera Server (TV-IP110W) transmits real-time high quality video over the Internet. View your camera from any Internet connection. Complimentary SecurView camera management software provides advanced monitoring of up to 16 cameras to protect what you value most. This stylish and compact Internet camera provides crystal clear MJPEG video streams.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 56
Excellent Camera Server July 26, 2008 electronics guy (USA) 68 out of 72 found this review helpful
I bought this on a Gold Box deal and am very glad I did. First, the image quality is superb. TRENDnet supplies software to assist in setting up the camera but people with a bit of technical experience can go straight to the web interface and set things up there and there are some great features that allow you to set this camera up pretty much however you want.
All of the camera settings are configurable - brightness, contrast, saturation, frame rate, resolution, and even settings to synchronize with 50 or 60 Hz lighting or outdoors. It also supports WPA2 encryption and three levels of password-protected access. You can have it grab images based on movement (requires accessing the camera with Internet Explorer to configure that for some reason) or on a time schedule, and either have it e-mail the images or ftp them somewhere. And it supports dynamic domain name configuration so you can access the camera even if your IP address changes.
It also supports time and date stamping the images - pretty much a necessity - but it also supports accessing an NTP server to make sure the onboard clock is accurate.
And once you get the camera all set up the way you want it, you can save out the configuration file to make it a snap to reconfigure it in case you ever do a hard reset that restores all the defaults.
Not that it will matter to most, but this camera server is actually a full ARM-based computer running Linux. If you go to the TRENDnet website, besides getting the latest firmware, you can also get the source code for the camera OS for those that want to tinker.
The final issue is just the value. You are getting a video camera and a web-serving computer with both wired and wireless interfaces for this price. I'm glad I got mine and am using it to monitor my front porch for visitors and also as a way to monitor the weather at home. With multiple cameras, it's easy to monitor all sorts of things if someone wants to.
IF YOU'RE STILL STRUGGLING - PLEASE READ THIS !! January 1, 2010 cadblu 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
My first suggestion; leave yourself plenty of time. This will not be accomplished in five minutes. However, I would suspect many of you reading this column are mighty frustrated by now, and are looking to the reviews for assistance. Fact is you will learn more from these reviews than from tech support! Here's how to set these cameras up (I have four!) TRENDnet Wireless Internet Camera Server (TV-IP110W)
Step 1. Lose the disk and the instruction manual. They are of little use.
Step 2. Enter the [...] website, find your camera in download section.
Step 3. Download and install SecureView and IPSetup.
Step 4. Power up the camera and install the ethernet cable to your router.
Step 5. Load IPSetup and find your camera, double click and enter the setup program.
Step 6. Select static IP and record the camera number, configure your settings.
Step 7. Hint! for email notification, ping your mail server and enter the numeric IP.
Step 8. Hint! select this NTP time server for your camera <64.90.182.55> otherwise the camera will forget the time each time you unplug it. This is a pain to reset! Make sure you enter your correct timezone, e.g. GMT -5:00 for Eastern US Time Zone
Step. 9 Port forward your router using the router setup routine. Just do a google on port forwarding!
Step 10. If port forwarding doesn't work, select another port, e.g. default port '80' did not work for me!
Step 11. Hint! You don't need SecureView to capture and email images! Just enable motion detect on the setup screen.
Step 12. To make sure you can view cameras from a remote location, use a laptop and connect to an unsecured wireless connection, enter "[...]" and record your IP address. Now enter your IP address e.g. [...] where the numeric string is your IP and :80 is the port you forwarded under steps 10 and 11.
Step 13. Hint! Do not try to view camera images on your desktop and wireless laptop at the same time! You will lose connectivity to your IP Cam! Each Camera must have a unique port!
Step 15: Sit back and enjoy the view!
PS. Trendnet offers Excellent technical support. They are open on New Year's Day and were extremely polite and helpful.
Exceeded my expectations for the price May 17, 2009 Edward Gaudette (Mass/NH) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
The TRENDnet wireless Internet Camera (TV-IP110W) exceeded my expectations so much I now have a total of 5 of them. I bought these to monitor a second home from my first. The setup was very simple and flawless. I admit I'm a geek so the typical non-geek might have a problem with the over-simplified documentation. The camera's settings let me easily set them up for indoor/outdoor monitoring etc. Unfortunately, I did have a problem that when power is lost, the camera gives up trying to find the wireless network, prior to my wireless becoming available. This meant needing to reboot the camera manually. Because I was remote I was unable to do so. I installed X10 power models on each camera so that now I can remotely power the cameras on/off as needed remotely. I've had the cameras installed for 6 months now and they have performed beautifully.
Works with Iphone and cam-viewer app January 18, 2009 Lisa J. Browning 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I bought this wireless camera for $69.99 on sale through amazon. It has crystal clear video and works flawlessly. I can't imagine why anyone would spend more money or say anything negative about this camera. I use it to view my dogs during the day and am able to use it with my iphone. There is an itunes application called cam-viewer that works great with this camera and the iphone. I highly recommend this camera.
For the price, this little camera does a great job. August 10, 2009 Just Al (FORT COLLINS, CO United States) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
REVISED 2/5/2010 - Operator error has now been resolved.
I was looking for was an IP camera that could detect motion and then capture a still image every 5 to 10 seconds until that motion ceased. The included SecurView software doesn't allow you to capture a single image, but it will allow you to record a short movie when motion is detected. (You can apparently specify the maximum size of the movie file). Alas, Linux is the only OS that I run 24/7 in this house, and SecurView only runs under Windows.
Someone here said that they got this camera to work with ZoneMinder (ZM) which runs under Linux, but I was not successful. (Apparently, there is a kludge you can patch into ZM to skip some extraneous garbage the camera injects into the video stream. I'm looking for something with a smaller foot-print than ZM, so I never tried that patch. BTW, the URI for video is /cgi/mjpg/mjpeg.cgi - don't hit that with your browser though). You can get an image from the camera into a browser by hitting the camera with the URI /cgi/jpg/image.cgi. But ZM didn't like that either, even using the username:password@host/URI format. (Rumor is that the camera is either missing or generating invalid HTTP headers so ZM can't handle it - and sorry dude, it's a TRENDnet problem).
I didn't have any trouble getting wireless networking going, WPA2-PRS using AES, (thanks to someone else here who explained the work-around for setting the channel number). I did have to barrow a laptop running Windows to do the configuration. :-\ (The configuration software is browser based, but it requires an Active-X control to do video streaming -- in order to set up motion detection in the camera -- so you have to use MSIE - as advertised). But the configuration user interface (in the camera itself) is feature rich and I thought that I'd died and gone to Linux heaven. (The camera itself is actually running Linux, hit the URI /cgi/systemlog.cgi for the camera's syslog).
You can specify an NTP server to get date/time at camera boot. You can turn off the LEDs on the front of the camera. You can time-stamp the video/images. You can create user accounts (on the camera) with unique passwords. You can configure an FTP 'event server' (active or passive) to which you can upload snapshots while viewing live video, You can give the camera a name that it uses as part of the path name to where it uploads images via FTP. (Also includes the date). You can configure motion detection (in the camera) using two adjustable portals within the view, and FTP those images to your FTP server. You can configure an EMAIL server for the same reason - I didn't try it, someone else says here says it works. You can specify 'schedule triggers' (based on specific days and times) and upload snapshots to your FTP or EMAIL server. These are all configuration items within the camera.
Be aware that there are other issues with this camera. Motion detection (in the camera anyway) appears to be based on changes in the ambient light. (I get lots of false detections at dawn and dusk). Night vision isn't great - street light alone isn't enough. The rumor is that the camera crashes every couple of days too. (Someone posted a work-around for that however: they just invoke the URI /cgi/restart.cgi every midnight to reboot the camera -- and I presume that this person is also running an NTP server, to reset the date/time in the camera.) And, I wouldn't call the software configuration in the camera all that 'intuitive'.
Windows users should be very happy with SecurView, which definitely allows you to watch real-time video and supports multiple cameras. SecurView can definitely detect motion and capture movies when motion occurs. (Over a wireless network, I don't think that you'd be able to monitor more than 3 or 4 live feeds).
If you want to use this camera under Linux, (to watch live video) you can apparently get ZoneMinder working by patching and compiling ZM yourself. Or, just use schedules and motion detection to FTP or EMail snap-shots up to your server. The 640x480 JPEG images take up about 40K per snap-shot.
For the cost, this camera does a terrific job. And now that I've figured out how to use it, I'm going to buy a couple more for home security usage.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 56
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Copyright © 2009 The Consumer Electronics Industry
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