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Squirrels and webcams

Jan10
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Ew, bogus squirrel rat crossbreed... surely that's just got the mange and lost the fur on it's tail though? It's a bit of a scrappy picture, could be some potatoshopping going on too.

Also WOO, cheers Andy, got my webcam up and running in the end - I think it must have been running before I realised. Nothing very exciting to see right now, though I have a live video feed of the Folkestone sky (the camera's stuffed in a corner out of the way, pointing upwards). Maybe an interesting seagull will fly over.



That's just a grab, not a live picture obviously. Going to update this with what I did and how I got up and running, and gotchas I found along the way. Humungous thanks to www.itchypaws.co.uk for talking me through all this, that's who I'm mostly paraphrasing below. My setup is Linksys WVC54G wireless network camera and Netgear DG834G wireless ADSL modem firewall router, here's how to make things work:

Reserve an IP address on my network for the camera - the router is a DHCP server, but I want the camera to have the same IP address each time things are rebooted. On the router admin page this is under Advanced -> LAN IP Setup. I set it to 192.168.0.2 as this is what it defaulted to.

On the "Services" menu on the router admin page, add a custom service with these attributes:

Name: Camera
Type: TCP/UDP
Start Port: 1025
End Port: 1025

The router admin page link is to my internal IP address, the default address for the router. If you've got the same router as me and you're at home, it should link to your router - if not, I don't know where it goes, not to me or my router anyway. When I forgot that address I Googled for netgear router default ip address, you'll find the default password there too, hope I've remembered to change mine...

On the "Firewall rules" menu on the router admin page, add a new inbound rule with these attributes:

Service: Camera (TCP/UDP 1025) (selected from the pulldown list)
Action: Allow ALWAYS
Send to LAN server: 192.168.0.2
WAN users: ANY

And that, friends, should be that. Now I had a few hiccups along the way that drove me mad. Somewhere in my home network, something was caching IP addresses. So, the camera was working when I thought it wasn't working, this drove me absolutely spastic. Have confidence in these instructions!

More things I learned here, when I remember them...

A few more points about , things that are annoying about it. To get a picture from the camera over the web, you have to be using MSIE. This is outrageous, and I'd recommend NOT getting this camera for that reason. There's currently no way to get even a static picture on a web browser if you're using another browser. It would be great to be able to grab a picture or video using the , even if just to show off to people how modern our household is, but you can't do it. There's some "downloading and recording scheduling" software that comes with the camera, which can grab you an image or show you video, but you won't necessarily have that installed everywhere you might want to see the picture. I've emailed Linksys support to see if they'll update things, I'm sure they will. Also annoying is the way the camera comes bundled with some dynamic dns software that you have to pay for - basically depending on your ISP at home, your IP address is likely to change every so often. To get a consistent link to the camera you need to use a dynamic DNS service, so I can give a domain name to the camera (I've got fg.dyndns.ws) and that will always point at the camera no matter if my IP address changes. I'm using www.dyndns.com, and they're free. If there's such a thing as a punter out there who knows less than me, they might have stumbled straight into the free trial with some other company that comes with the camera and ended up paying needlessly.

There are plenty of positive things about this camera, it's wireless, it has a built in web server (so doesn't need a computer at home to be on to view it), and it comes bundled with motion detection and "email me a video clip when someone's burgling my house" type stuff. I've not looked at alternative cameras since I bought this one, because DUH, I've got it now, but I would recommend you do before settling on one. Let me know how you get on.

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Fitter, happier, more productive

Jan3
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I'm not falling into the trap of making resolutions, but I am going to try and get a few more things sorted. Had a fairly productive Christmas, so why not continue in this vein? Oh yes, spurred on by my new toilet seat, here's what I'm achieving...

We have got INTERNETS on the within litterally DAYS of owning it, this is fantastic. The is a great piece of kit, the screen is great and the games are great. Having a built in web browser and wirelessness just makes it fantastic. I had a load of grief setting up my on our home network when we moved to Folkestone, ie it didn't work immediately so I gave up on it. Investigating setting up of my new camera (thanks Andy) I realised I had super tight access control, stopping anything but my PC connecting to the router. So now everything in the flat is connected wirelessly, which is great. It does seem a shame that while we're doing internets "wirelessly" in the front room we really need to have the power cord plugged into the or though, it really drains the power... Anyway, great to be getting more use out of the again, even if we're mostly just playing Scrabble on it.

Music; for ages I've had no speakers on my work computer, so to listen to music I've had to get on the floor, plug in my headphones, and remember to unplug them again when I leave. Then I rolled over them with my chair and they stopped making sounds. Now, not only did I buy some, but my lovely rose of Clare bought me some too, so I have a pair to leave constantly at work, and a pair to carry with the ! No more kneeling on the floor just because I got some promo, that turns out to be rubbish anyway!
Bank accounts; We needed a new bank account, I had been dawdling over getting one for ages, and we had some cheques to pay in. We went down to Nationwide in Folkestone while we were off, and it was all done in about half an hour! Next stop investments... I'm about to get some shares in the company as a result of our reverse takeover, and my very old shares in what the company used to be. This will be exciting, and I may pay closer attention. Soon, oh yes, all these things will provide us with an income and we can sit at home full time looking at squirrels out of the window and eating christmas puddings.

Property; If I was resolving to take more of an interest in Folkestone property, I'd be jumping up and down at the news of a neighbouring flat selling for 205k, I'm sure that's a two bedder too. My property map is playing up at the moment, Google Maps have made a change to their API that's stopping the pictures of property popping up, gah... Still, sounding good! Maybe we will start looking to move, get a bigger place before we can't afford it. Maybe.

What else should I try to achieve? We tidied the flat, I fixed the toilet, I won money off everyone at pool, what else is there in life to achieve? Man I'm feeling positive today...

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Wireless home network

Jun2

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Some right useful info about setting up my own from mate at www.itchypaws.co.uk... Posting it up here so I don't delete the email again, and just in case it's useful to anyone else!

I have the following router (I think I sent this through before?): www.netgear.co.uk/html/prod_routers_adsl.htm#dg834g

Full HTML datasheet can be found here.

In summary, it supports the following:
- VPN passthrough
- One machine in a DMZ
- Hardware (SPI) Firewall
- MAC Address filtering
- WEP Encryption including 64-bit (40-bit) and 128-bit (104-bit)
- 802.11g and 802.11b (simultaneously)
- Network Address Translation
- It's a wireless access point
- It's a router
- It's an ADSL modem

I bought ours from www.savastore.com/ which was the cheapest at the end of November - you can probably get it cheaper elsewhere now, although when I looked last month for someone else, I couldn't find it any cheaper? Oh yeah, it also received the PC Plus Editor's Choice award last month...

It's been rock solid since we turned it on too and is very easy to configure and I can even get MSN Messenger video and audio calls to work over it now they fixed a bug in the firmware.

Some routers come with a print server in-built but I personally wouldn't touch them - the NetGear one above doesn't. I think it's far better just to buy either a wireless print server box (they're tiny) or a wired one which connects directly to your router (if you can put your router somewhere near your printer then that's probably the better and far cheaper option). I did a fair bit of research into these last month for a mate - I'll try to remember to dig out the email at home tonight. You can get either USB or parallel ones though with one or two ports. Some even come with a USB and parallel port. Might just be worth leaving the print servers until after you buy the router though as you might find you don't need one?

I have the following PCMCIA card for my laptop which is about 32 GBP inc. VAT at SavaStore.com: NetGear WG511GE 802.11g 54Mbps Wireless PCMCIA Card

And the folllowing PCI card for my desktop machine: Belkin F5D7000UK 54g Wireless Desktop PCI Interface Card

I wouldn't bother getting anything less than a 802.11g card these days (802.11b will slowly die out) - you'll only regret it in the long run.

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