![]() They’re designed with Logitech’s handsome-though conspicuous-gray and silver webcam styling, with large red lights that flash during recording. You wouldn’t want to record home videos with these cameras, but criminals have been identified using still frames from lower-resolution black-and-white security cameras Alert’s are hugely better by comparison. While this frame rate falls short of the capabilities of Logitech’s top webcams, the resolution easily and substantially exceeds the quality of typical home security systems, including ones we’ve seen with iOS compatibility. Logitech’s Alert system cameras are capable of recording color 960×720 resolution videos at 15 frames per second. If you want greater control over the cameras, you need to pay $80 per year for a “Web and Mobile Commander” subscription service. This is as close to “live” as you’re going to get for something being streamed out of your house, to a Logitech server, and then to your monitoring device yes, that’s how it’s done, which means that if you’re standing in front of your camera with an iPhone or iPad, you’ll wait half a minute or so to see yourself walking up to it. What you get for “free” with your $300 purchase is Internet-dependent access to the video from your camera or cameras on a roughly 15- to 30-second delay. Alert 700e outdoor cameras go for $280 each, including night vision and weatherproofing we’ve only tested the 750i and 700i.Īdditionally, while the Alert system does indeed offer free viewing of live video anywhere in the world, there are a couple of caveats. You’ll most likely want not just the single initial video camera in the Alert 750i Master System box, but also at least one Alert 700i Add-On Camera ($230 each). Though the Alert system starts at a base price of $300, there’s more to the story than that.
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