Re: simple home monitoring?

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Hi,
We have been using zoneminder to do such monitoring, but for Karin's case that is over-kill. Something that I did not realize before using this software, is that changes in the light also causes events, IE. you can get false alarms because of the light changing as the day progresses.
Kind regards, Willem


On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Karen Lewellen wrote:

Good answers, let me spell this out more carefully.
1, this is an apartment building, and I am on the top floor.
2, I have no need to monitor when I am home, the two locks I have on the door prevent entry.
3. I have no pets unless you count my stuffies.
4, I only need to monitor /capture activity on the front door, and obviously prefer something that might not attract too much attention , I know where to place the camera to prevent issues. something I would activated when I leave, and turn off when home. if you must run a wire from the door to the pie, that might defeat the purpose. based on that simplicity, if a machine for it really is $40 in Canada i might get something new since it will only be doing this job. No machines with anything running on them now, but have an older desktop. p 2 i think that could be set up for it.
what is the simplest way  to do the job based on these details?

I am not vetoing anything just want to keep it simple.
Karen


On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Tim Chase wrote:

On July 18, 2015, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Would be nice is a simple system that I can dedicate a machine for,
meaning a basic setup, with few resources required.
perhaps software that would email me an alert  or monitoring
results.

Depending on the complexity of the solution you want, and what you
have on hand, your solution can range from free-ish to several hundred
dollars.

At the cheapest end of the spectrum, if you already have a
computer/laptop with a camera (A generic USB web-cam should run under
$20 and I've spotted them for close to $5 on sale or used), as others
have mentioned, you can point the camera at the door and use some
vision-processing or motion-detection libraries to determine if the
camera sees movement. If so, this can trigger all manner of actions
(take a picture, send an email or text-message alert, sound alarms).
You could get false-alarms here though if you're not careful.  If you
monitor the entire frame that the camera captures, friends or dogs
walking around in the middle of the night might trigger alerts. You
might have to limit the observed area to the upper corner of the door
where it's unlikely to see motion you don't care about.  Also, it's
easy for a camera to get bumped unless you mount it on a wall.

A slight step up, some small hardware investment could put a
magnetic reed-switch (Adafruit sells one for $4) on your door-frame
and run a wire to something like a Raspberry Pi (another $30 for one
with a network jack on Adafruit) so that you capture door open/close
events and trigger an action only when the door really opens/closes.
You could even combine the ideas so that when the reed-switch detects
the door opening, an attached camera would take a picture/video and
upload it to an off-site location.  Or it could email you an alert or
play audio or whatever.  One of the biggest advantages of this setup
is how little power that the Pi draws.  A desktop/laptop may be
drawing 60-120 watts of power, whereas the Pi draw much less.  For a
security system that will be on all (or most of) the time, the
electricity costs can add up.

Finally at the mega-bucks end of the spectrum, you can get security
systems with multiple cameras, network integration, and alerts.
These are usually in the $300-1000 range depending on the number of
cameras and the features of the system.  This sounds like overkill
for what you want.  But maybe you won the lottery, in which case,
bully for you, knock yourself out and get a top-of-the-line system.
And fly me out as an installation consultant (grins)

-tim


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