Looking for a decent IP webcam..

D-link DCS series are decent and affordable... I have a couple of the sub-$100 DCS-900 ethernet cams and they work very well.

--csb
 
I second the DCS-900. We use one in our company and are buying a second. For its price, there really wasn't anything else like it.
 
If you are planning to view the webcam on the internet be aware that some internet providers do not allow outside traffic to connect to an internal IP address. Verizon does not allow you to do this (of course I found out the hard way) unless you upgrade to their business plan which costs twice as much.
 
thanks for the suggestions :)

mcrist what do you mean? Isn't it as simple as getting a static IP and fowarding a port to the internal ip address?


What port wouldn't they let open?
 
Verizon blocks all traffic that originates from the internet so that a home user cannot have a public website. Basically traffic can come from your home account to the internet but not the other way around. You can always upgrade the account to a business account a pay double the cost. I was ****ed off when I discovered this.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9291256#post9291256 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by NoSchwag
thanks for the suggestions :)

mcrist what do you mean? Isn't it as simple as getting a static IP and fowarding a port to the internal ip address?


What port wouldn't they let open?
Yes, getting a static IP address requires a business account.
 
You can usually get around the static IP address issue by using a dynamic DNS service such as no-ip. Check out www.no-ip.com . They have a free service and one that you can pay for. The difference is with the premium service you can register a domain name with them, with the free service you can have a domain name but it will have something on the end of it. I host my website from my house with their premium service and it works very well. I also use their free service for a few domain names that I use for game servers I host out of my house as well as a teamspeak server, these servers don't require a user frienldy domain name since I only share them with a few friends. Here are some examples.

(note these are just examples, not meant to be clicked)
Free service: www.yourwebsitename.no-ip.org
premium service: www.yourwebsitename.com

You can check out my website by clicking my house.

They also provide a redirect service to get around the ISP's that block port 80 traffic (web traffic) that comes from your house, and it is included in the package you just need to enable it. Basically what happens is you set up your website on a different port other than 80 and no-ip will send that traffic to the proper port on your end. This allows you to bypass verizon's block.
 
You are right. Not only verizon but many ISP are starting to block incoming ports. This is due to SPAMMERs and people like that doing things from home. I don't really care for this but it happens.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9296307#post9296307 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by cubber
You can usually get around the static IP address issue by using a dynamic DNS service such as no-ip. Check out www.no-ip.com . They have a free service and one that you can pay for. The difference is with the premium service you can register a domain name with them, with the free service you can have a domain name but it will have something on the end of it. I host my website from my house with their premium service and it works very well. I also use their free service for a few domain names that I use for game servers I host out of my house as well as a teamspeak server, these servers don't require a user frienldy domain name since I only share them with a few friends. Here are some examples.

(note these are just examples, not meant to be clicked)
Free service: www.yourwebsitename.no-ip.org
premium service: www.yourwebsitename.com

You can check out my website by clicking my house.

They also provide a redirect service to get around the ISP's that block port 80 traffic (web traffic) that comes from your house, and it is included in the package you just need to enable it. Basically what happens is you set up your website on a different port other than 80 and no-ip will send that traffic to the proper port on your end. This allows you to bypass verizon's block.
That was the first thing I tried but Verizon blocks all ports. I wasn't worried about DNS since it was only for me. I figured I would just type my homes IP address but Verizon stopped that. They wanted 99 dollars a month for the business account which I thought was ridiculous. Its not like I am setting up a public website it was just for me.
 
Switch to time warner road runner if you can, they don't block web traffic. At least they don't at my house.

Also this is straight from No-IP's site. This is part of their "Plus Package"

Port 80 Redirection

A great number of cable and DSL providers block HTTP port 80. This is specially done to stop the spread of worms and viruses. If port 80 is blocked, running a website is next to impossible. With the Port 80 redirection feature you can still run a web server even if port 80 is blocked.

Full info here
 
comcast doesnt block ports either. I run an FTP server, web server from my house and I can connect using remote desktop ( port 3389 ) and do anything I want.

If an ISP blocks all ports ( with the exception of 80 and some other needed one like 25 etc ), then that ISP is useless in my opinion. What you do with your connection is up to you because you pay for it. That would also prevent you from sharing files on a p2p network ( which I'm not endorsing here but just saying LOL ). That could be viewed as a good thing or a bad thing depending on how you look at it.

And I don't see what good it does to block ports for 'spammers' cause 'spam' is an email term and if that ISP blocks my email from coming in, they're useless....if they block the outbound port, then they'd be useless to me since I'm a software developer and constantly use outbound mail for things.

Just my .02.....it burns me up how large corporations try to 'control' their customers.
 
I would love to switch providers but I am currently using Verizon fiber at 15mb downstream and 2mb upstream. I have the option for 30mb now and soon they will offer 100mb. It's so fast that cable or DSL would seem slow. Plus I am waiting for their TV over fiber.
 
My cable is running at around 10/1.5 right now so it is very comparable to your current speed. But really what is the use of all that speed if you can't do anything with it. You only need so much bandwidth for surfing the web.
 
heh heh...the prez of the local reef club actually put a pc tower next to his sump inside his stand and had his web cam mounted in front of the tank...needless to say, the pc was ruined LOL...that was pretty funny.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9304804#post9304804 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by cubber
My cable is running at around 10/1.5 right now so it is very comparable to your current speed. But really what is the use of all that speed if you can't do anything with it. You only need so much bandwidth for surfing the web.

you are so right... Why give you so much if they won't let you do anything but download high-res porn? Wait, what am I complaining about?
 
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