CCTV

Associate
Joined
14 Jun 2009
Posts
432
Hi,

I'm interested installing a CCTV solution within my home but don't really want to spend a lot of money on it.

I'm stuck on how to go about it and was wondering if anyone here can shed some ideas? Is it possible to build a PC and just purchase cameras? If so, what software do I need?

Would it be better to buy a all in one solution? I would probably have issues with getting power to required locations, would PoE injectors be needed?

It doesn't need to be fancy, maybe a maximum of 4 cameras.

Any help would be great.

Thanks
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Jun 2004
Posts
2,692
Location
South Scotland
you could buy a NAS and some Y Cam IP cameras (Ive found these to be decent), NAS would give you extra functionality as well, IP cams give u remote viewing too :), circa £150 per cam, Synology NAS circa £180 plus HDDs..........NAS much better than having a PC on, also u have a plethora of IP viewing apps for android and apple devices.
 
Associate
Joined
27 Aug 2003
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307
Location
North West, England
I'm interested in this too but won't be looking at it for another 6 months.

You could perhaps build a new machine then install Zone Minder ( http://www.zoneminder.com ). ZM will accept all types of cameras, you can use webcams, network cameras etc But that's way beyond my knowledge.

Cheers,
Thomas.
 
Associate
OP
Joined
14 Jun 2009
Posts
432
I had a look at the Synology solution which seems decent but from what I read you also need to buy a 4 camera license if you want more than 1 camera, cost around £170 for the licence.
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Jun 2004
Posts
2,692
Location
South Scotland
I had a look at the Synology solution which seems decent but from what I read you also need to buy a 4 camera license if you want more than 1 camera, cost around £170 for the licence.

That's only if u want to use their embedded software, imho its not necessary (and a bit flaky), you can just set up a schedule on camera to write to a directory on the NAS and overwrite when getting to a certain amount, also viewing IP cams from tablets and smartphones is trivial now too
 
Associate
Joined
28 Jan 2007
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1,700
Location
Manchester
iSpy software looks good. Been playing with it on my microserver with a couple of usb webcams. Its free for basic functionality, remote viewing is quite cheap.
 
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