Most helpful customer reviews
108 of 111 people found the following review helpful.
Great deal, but you’ve gotta work for it By Pat Denoli I’m usually pretty good with bad English translations in my instruction manuals, but this product is pretty rough. You often can’t tell if the manual is telling you that something needs to be done in order to make something happen, that it shouldn’t be done if you want it to happen… or if you need to make the second thing happen (some other way) in order for the first thing to be taken care of. Use of negatives and double-negatives is a challenge, too. If you are familiar with the configuration of network gear, try to forget what you know. It doesn’t work *exactly* the same with this camera. You’re better off as a novice, I think.
Since it burned 15 hours of my time, here’s a possible help for some people about to return their camera because “wireless isn’t working”. This is for people who manually assign IPs, or who don’t understand why the camera isn’t finding any wireless networks. Understand that the camera has to be set it up in very specific stages. You can’t make all your changes at once. Also, you must use the proprietary software to connect to the camera over Ethernet the first time. Don’t use other software. Make sure you set your router for dynamic IP allocation. Next, you reboot through software. Next you power cycle. Log into the camera using IE. It says you can use other browsers, but don’t. NOW set up the wireless properties. Save them, remove the ethernet cable. Reboot through software and then power cycle (yes, that’s two boots). Log in again. NOW change the IP assignment from dynamic to manual. Save and reboot through software and then power cycle. You won’t find these instructions in the manual. I had to stumble upon it and I’ve repeated the process with minor variations to be sure – nothing else works. Good grief!!!!!!! I was about to pack these things up and ship them back. Looks like they work fine if you know the right dance. I’m using 128 bit WEP. If you’re using something else – good luck to you.
51 of 52 people found the following review helpful.
Love it! By My Opinion I was a little concerned after reading all of the posts complaining about how hard their experiences were in setting up this camera. Aside from that, the ratings were good, the price was right, and since I have 20 years IT experience and am a glutton for punishment, I ordered one. Actually I need at least three, but I wanted to buy one as a test, and if it passed, I’d buy the additional two cameras.
I ordered this camera and several days later it was already in my mailbox. I unpacked it, and was going to put off configuring it until Christmas day, when I would have had much of the day to play with it. Being the workaholic that I am, I decided to go ahead and try and configure it within minutes of deciding I wasn’t going to do it. I got out the instruction book and started going through the steps, one by one. The grammar kind of bothered me, you can tell English wasn’t a native language for the technical document writer. I’m not going to lie, you’re going to need a bit of technical experience to get this camera connected, but it’s not the camera’s fault. With all the security that’s around nowadays, along with all the possible setup scenarios, it’s likely never going to be a plug and play scenario to get an IP camera working. I’ll bottom line you though – it was worth it. I love this thing!
My first bit of advice is to take the instruction book that’s inside the box, and put it directly into your trash can. Seriously. That book is flawed and you’re going to need the Hubble Telescope to read the small print to begin with. Follow the manual on the CD that’s in the box. There are guides on the CD. One is a User Manual PDF and the other is a quick guide. Follow the User Manual for it’s a bit more detailed. Now let me describe my equipment and the steps I took to get this camera configured. My equipment: Linksys Wireless Router, PC running Windows XP Pro SP3, Cable Mode for Internet connection.
If you want this thing to email you photos when the motion sensor is tripped (or to connect to it via the Internet, which is why you’re looking at an IP camera to begin with), then you’re going to need an Internet connection. You’ll need at least a Cable modem. I can’t imagine how slow it will be if you have DSL and you’re trying to connect to this camera over the Internet. So, I’ve got a Cable modem, Linksys wireless router, and a NON SSL POP email account. YOU CANNOT USE GMAIL WITH THE CURRENT FIRMWARE WITH THIS CAMERA. Gmail requires SSL and the SMTP client on this camera as of today is not written for SSL, so save yourself some time in trying to do it anyway. Unless you use STunnel from [...], it’s just not going to happen. Since I have several email accounts, I simply chose one that I knew didn’t require SSL (it’s a hosted account I have with Rochen, with gives you the option to use their non SSL SMTP port 1025 which will work with this camera, or to use the more common Secure SMTP like that of Gmail which won’t work with this camera.)
Quick steps of what I did:
Step 1: Screw the antenna into the camera. Plug the network cable into the camera and then into an available port on your wireless router. Plug the power cable into the wall and then into the camera.
Step 2: Now on your computer, which is also running through your router, run the IP Camera tool from the CD, but first make sure you exit any web browsers you may have open. You may have to reboot your computer after the IP Camera Tool installation.
Step 3: You should be reading through the User Manual at this point, as there are many possibilities for your current setup. You should have also already thrown the printed manual into your trash can where it rightfully belongs. Run the IP Cameral Tool icon from the desktop if you had to reboot your computer. Your camera should show up in that list as anonymous, followed by [...] Personally, I’m running DHCP so an IP was already assigned to the camera when it booted. If you double click on the IP address of the camera in the IP Camera Tool window, it will bring up a web browser window for you to login to the camera. The default username is admin with a blank password (this part is not in that stupid printed manual that came in the box with the camera..but luckily you threw it in the trash.)
Step 4: This is important: save yourself some grief and use Internet Explorer to get this thing setup. You can play around with Firefox and other browsers all you want later, but for sake of simplicity, just use IE for now. Since you’re using IE you’d use the first set of login parameters on the login page.
Step 5: Now that you are logged in, you should see an Active X request so go ahead and right click and install it. Then you may need to run an additional app that pops up before you can see the video stream.
Step 6: Hey wow! There you are in the video if you’ve got it pointed at yourself. So far so good. I played around a bit at this point, panning the camera left, right, up, down..pretty nice! Cut out the lights…yep..can still see me in the dark…except now I’ve got big devilish pupils. Now you need to configure all of the settings under administrator (on the bottom left of the screen).
You need to decide how you will get to the camera over the Internet. I’ve got a DynDNS account, but it’s a whole lot more easy to just use port forwarding on my router. So I picked an available port, gave it some random name, and pointed that port to the fixed IP of the camera. You’ll also need to be sure you get all of your settings dead accurate correct, otherwise your wireless won’t work. Make sure your SSID is correct, your Auth Key is correct, Encryption type, etc. etc. If just one thing is wrong, you won’t be able to go wireless. For certain settings in your camera, it may need to reboot the camera..kind of annoying but it is what it is. Once you get all of your wireless settings correct, you can remove the network cable from the back of the camera. Your camera should still show up in the IP Camera Tool window. If not, you did something wrong. If so, you’re now ready to go wireless. To test, I used: [...] :AssignedPortIUsed Works great!
Regarding the email: because of the poor use of English, when you are putting in SMTP server account settings (if you chose to have it email you pictures when motion trips the alarm) then BE SURE YOU CLICK SUBMIT AFTER YOU ENTER ALL OF THE INFORMATION AND BEFORE BEFORE BEFORE **BEFORE** YOU CLICK ON “TEST”. The camera will not take the settings until you click on SUBMIT. So make sure you SUBMIT before you TEST. I got hung up on this for about 30 minutes of KNOWING my settings were correct, but couldn’t figure out why the camera said it couldn’t connect to my account. I even did the whole Telnet routine to connect manually to the SMTP port because I knew my settings were correct. CLICK SUBMIT BEFORE YOU TEST.
Regarding the motion alarm: I used the scheduling for the motion alarm to trip when I’m at work…so I put in my work schedule. No one should be walking around inside my home while I’m not there. If they do, I’ve got them on video straight to my cell phone, in which case I’d promptly call the police.
Well, that’s about it for me. It works great. Also, as one of the receiving email accounts, I wanted to mention that you can use your email to text with your cell phone company (I have tmobile, so it’s [...] ) so now when the motion is tripped on your camera, it will send the pictures via SMS text to your cell phone. I can’t say enough good things about this camera. I just hope it stands the test of time..and maybe I’ll come back and do a follow up review in a few months.
Have fun! Merry Christmas!
70 of 77 people found the following review helpful.
Basic IP camera, poor low light performance By R. Hilton Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/RZSJ99FB4Z7VN I have been using this camera for 2 days in my home’s security monitoring system. The camera does well in daylight and serves images over its web server around 30 FPS at 320 x 240 resolution.
However, at night, the camera turns on its IR LEDS, this apparently draws a lot of power and the camera’s frame rate drops to only 7 FPS.
For simple monitoring of your home while you are away, it is easy to setup and use, the web server includes buttons to turn the camera left/right and up/down and to make small adjustment to brightness and contrast.
The customer image that is labeled “Kitchen – 2010-07-08 01:24:48″ is an image capture during the night where a cat jumped onto my kitchen island. It’s hard to tell it’s a cat from the single frame. This camera may not be that useful as a security camera because the quality of the images, especially in darkness, is poor.
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Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan
>Support IE browser or any other general browsers >Wi-Fi compliant with wireless standards IEEE 802.11b/g >Support both WEP & WPA Encryption >Motion detection alert thru email or upload effigy to FTP >Multi-level users management with password protection
Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan Photo
Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan Image
Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan Image
Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan Picture
Foscam Fi8908w Wireless Ip Camera With Pan Picture
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