My friend is setting up a small home office conference room. She asked if wireless webcams were any good and I had no idea they existed. I googled wireless webcam and got a bunch of those cheap top 10 lists but as far as I can tell, they are all normal USB wired webcams like the Logi C920.

I plan on using an r10 as a webcam over Wifi. I have just about everything working. However, when I switch the camera off, then on again(to replace a battery for example) the webcam software fails to reconnect. I have to reset everything and re-pair the camera to get the the utility to re-pair with the camera.


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I use the cameras network menu to reconnect to my PC, and the camera appears to be reconnected from the cameras menu. The webcam utility does not seem to recognize that the camera's reconnected.. Under the wireless camera setting menu, it shows me the the blue reconnect button (which just brings up instructions for using the camera's menu) and does not show the connected icon.

When the camera is powered off the wifi connection will be broken and will need to be re-established. One thing to double check in this case is which software you are using. We have two similarly named pieces of software.

Our import software named EOS Utility is able to connect to your camera through wifi, but that software does not have webcam capability. That software is to remotely control your camera or to import photos and videos you've already taken. Our webcam software is EOS Webcam Utility Pro and that software needs a USB connection. The webcam software is not able to connect to a camera through wifi.

If you need our webcam software that is available HERE. Once you are on the web page click on the Software & Drivers button and the current version is EOS Webcam Utility Pro 2.0.30. Once that is installed put the camera into movie mode, connect the camera and computer with a USB cable, open the EOS Webcam Utility software, and you will be able to see the video feed from the camera. Once you see that open your conferencing or streaming software and when you go to select the camera you will have an option for EOS Webcam Utility. Select that and it will start using the video feed from the camera.

Oh, and one wifi related question - how far away from the unit can you stand with you phone to pick up a good signal? And does putting the unit inside the waterproof box you suggest reduce the range of the wifi signal?

Many thanks,

Mark

Love what you've done -- but had an idea on how it could be taken a bit further. You wouldn't need to send in a camera probe to get results or ever disturb the birds.


But how about a very inexpensive micro-board with camera and a solar panel on the roof? It could wake up every so often take a photo. And then once a day it could upload all the photos over wifi.


Micro: ESP32-cam

Solar arrays to support battery type

battery under protective housing



I purchased one of these a year or so back and after much scratching of head due to lack/poor instruction managed to get it working in direct mode (ie wifi directly from camera to android tablet). Time has moved on and I have now purchased a new android tablet and I am trying to recreate a working link with my new tablet. Downloading the app XMeye is fine though it now looks a little different. I have a major stumbling though, I need to connect the tablet wifi to the network wifi broadcast by the camera and that needs a security password !!!! I don't think I have ever had one and can not for the life of me remember how I fudged it with the old tablet. The password field on the tablet seems to remain grey until at least eight characters are input so am guessing the password must be at least eight characters long; the angeleyes box has a hand written label on front w2565J clearly intended for some purpose but does not seem to fit the bill even with all the variants of upper/lower case (it is only six characters whereas the android wont ungrey the field until at least eight characters entered). Has anybody got any thoughts advice or suggestions; it seems a shame to bin as it did seem to function reasonably for the price?

First thing I checked as it specified 5V@2A. I may ask for an exchange instead of a refund - would be nice for this to work - I like the housing. I'm almost (almost) tempted to keep it and replace the guts with a good wifi 1080p - a Wansview. But I can machine a housing cheaper, so maybe that's the route. I've already got cams. Retevis has been very pleasant to deal with.

You can use esp32-cam:

- cheap as dirt, you can get esp32-cam which as integrated camera (but you will probably require additional module to attach it via usb to program it) or esp32-wroom ( or wrover which as PSRAM mainly for live stream and realtime image processing) + camera

- small (can be in the case of the size of the match box)

- can be powered from USB port

- wifi

- no external web/cloud services required, all in your own network

- esphome software integrates with HomeAssistant natively (for the cost of live streaming performance) and really easy to modify if you take time to get to know how esphome works (it's way easier after you do it)

- with NOIR cameras, but it will still require some IR leds to light up the printing area - and you will still get monochrome image - from my experience NOIR is not really worth it - better stick to normal cameras + take a picture once in a while + turn on led to light up the scene (let say once after finishing layer).

I'd like to stream video from the camera on an iOS device to a receiver via wifi, in effect turning the device into a wireless webcam. Is there a way to build a small app that captures video input on an iOS app and sends it via an RTSP stream or similar?

As long as the two devices are on the same Wi-Fi network, or connected by USB, they should link without any extra steps. EpocCam should show up as a webcam for Zoom, Hangouts, or any other video chat application you might use. In my testing, it worked as well as can be expected, despite the annoying full-screen ads and a watermark on your video.

Another option available to iPhone users comes from Apple directly. Continuity Camera allows you to clip your phone to a Mac and turn it into a webcam. The feature can be used to replace a broken webcam or upgrade your existing one.

Finally, you need to mount your phone onto your laptop or computer monitor, or you can set it on a stand on your desk. Apple sells a MagSafe mount from Belkin, but you can also find many options on Amazon. When you start up a video call, it'll use your phone's camera as the webcam.

I got a Bros Trend wifi extender with a LAN port. The idea was to connect the camera using a LAN cable to the extender. The extender would extend my existing router's network. I was hoping that this way, I could connect to the camera from any computer connected to my original network.

Adding an outlet to the junction box, and then plug in the reolink adapter should work. If exposed to weather, use a weatherproof in-use cover over the outlet. Make sure you have wifi signal at the location before doing all the work, of course.

I have had an on going issue where my Nest outdoor camera will connect to the Nest wifi point which is actually the weakest point from where the camera is located. This makes the camera pretty much unusable.

The frustrating part is that the camera is located outside the windows of my home office where the Nest wifi router is. The camera is literally less than 6 feet from the access point through a window (which is not tinted). Instead, the camera constantly connects to the Nest Wifi point at the other end of the house. There is also another Nest wifi point in between these two which it will not connect to.

Please note that NewTek NDI is a third party integration and not affiliated or sponsored in any way. Please make sure to read their network requirements before expecting this to simply work. I had to upgrade my wireless router for the connection to be established. Basically I am saying that I don't know if it will work on your wifi, so please consult NewTek here.

The problem I'm facing is that I don't get any actual video being streamed or shown. The built in microphone works and, when running Cheese, when I press the camera button on the webcam itself the software recognises that the button is pressed.

I am getting ready to do summer classes on animation, specifically Stop Motion Animation. I need a small inexpensive wifi (or direct connect) camera to use with Stop Motion Studio on iPads. iPhones do work but having youngsters play around with expensive pieces of hardware while working with clay and Legos in itself is an issue. Plus I don't want to jack my prices by several hundred $$ for cameras just to use $7 software. I might as well fold up my educational tent. Cateater software has been less than helpful with me. All the cameras I have tried have their own app. I tried to connect using ip addresses but none of the cameras will work without their own app. Anyone run into this; know of a camera that will work; actually gotten this to work? Thanks, Joe B e24fc04721

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