Use Nanny Cameras and Door and Window Alarms to Keep a Watchful Eye on Your Home

Home security surveillance systems have come a long way in the past twenty years and, as the frontline of technology has moved, so the prohibitive price tags on their more sophisticated components have fallen away. Things like nanny cameras have come out of the domain of the rich and famous, and become affordable for ordinary people with day jobs. The same is true of motion detector alarms and door and window alarms.

Magnetic alarm contacts, the twin magnetic pads used to make door alarms, cost less than $4, and are available at the majority of major hardware stores. These contacts are used to form a circuit that’s broken when a door or window is opened. They’re so easy to install that many people these days are undertaking the job of incorporating them into their home security surveillance system themselves. Of course, if mucking about with silicone guns and tubes of wood glue isn’t your bag, security companies such as ADT are usually willing to do the job at minimal cost for their customers (though this will, of course, only apply if you’re signed up for their security services).

Since contacts guard your doors and windows, you should consider them the first line of defense for your home security system. Next on the list should be motion detector alarms. These, too, are relatively cheap. There are a few different technologies that allow for motion detection. Ultra wideband radar (BWR) detectors emit an inaudible signal over a fixed range. If that signal bounces back sooner than expected, the BWR detector knows that something has moved across its view, and trips the alarm.

Passive infra-red (PIR) motion detector alarms have become integral to most everyday home security surveillance systems. They measure the infrared light that radiates from objects within their fields of view. When an object of one temperature, such as person, passes before an infrared source with another temperature, such as a couch, the PIR detector registers that as motion. In this instance, the term ‘passive’ is used to indicate that PIR detectors do not actually emit a beam of infrared light (you’d need to pay quite a bit more for that), but just passively accepts incoming infrared light.

Out of all home security surveillance system components, nanny cameras are probably the devices that have evolved the most. From the fuzzy, pixilated footage of yesteryear, these devices are now more sensitive than most human eyes and can be easily rigged to stream their footage to your very own secure website, allowing you to check on your baby even if you happen to be a continent away with nothing but a cellphone.

The data from your nanny cameras can be streamed to an online storage cluster, and stored for days, weeks or months (depending on how much you’re willing to pay for the privilege), allowing you to review incidents long after they transpire. Of course, online storage is only cheap up to a point - a serious home security surveillance system might call for many terabytes of storage space, assuming that you’re recording every minute of every day from multiple cameras.

There is a way to get around this, of course. It’s as simple as using your motion detector alarms, along with your door and window alarms, to activate your webcams, so that they’re only switched on when there’s actually something going on in the house. There is a variety of software designed to integrate home security surveillance systems that allows for this, and numerous brands of security camera come equipped with motion detection right out the box.

Learn more about Home Security SurveillanceStop by this site where you can find out all about Wireless Security Cameras and what they can do for you.

- Jeffrey Parker

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