At Home with Tech

Unlock the power of all your technology and learn how to master your photography, computers and smartphone.

Category: Tech Fixes

I Don’t Know How to Install my Wireless IP Camera, Part 1

Say hi to HAL. Or you can call my BabyCam – Darth. Either way, this black Foscam Wireless IP camera represents the dark side of the Force until I can figure out how to get it hooked up. Join the resistance!

Some tech battles you tackle head on, some you don’t, and some you leave alone for another day.

And some tech riddles are clearly above your tech-grade.
The problems you’re not supposed to try to fix, or risk total “tech-tastrophe.”

It’s like entering the sacred kingdom of the true tech geek without a membership card.

And I don’t have one of those.
(My old Star Trek convention pass from 1977 doesn’t count.)

Sure, I know more about home tech than some, but you’ve heard the saying,
“The smarter you are, the dumber you feel.”

Often, I can get it work, but I’m not really sure how I did it.
Sound familiar?

Is There Time to Figure out the BabyCam and Have a Baby?
Two and a half years ago, I was running about the house, prepping for the stork’s arrival. What technologies did I need?!

“You should buy a baby monitor,” some of our friends cried out.

So I did some research and found a perfectly adequate Graco audio monitor with two receivers.

My first new parental tech “Aha Moment” was when I realized that one receiver wouldn’t cut it. You need two.
One to carry around until it runs out of juice and another one fully charged and ready to go when the first one poops out!
(no baby pun intended)

I bought the two-receiver system and proudly reported that we were baby ready.

“Just an audio monitor? Can’t it do video too!?”
(Video?)

“Sure… you’ve got to see your baby in his room!
Audio can’t tell you the whole story.
You’ve got to seeeeeeee him.”

Wow.
I clearly had some catching up to do.

So I did more research, this time on wireless video/audio baby monitors and came up with the consensus that these devices worked… but just barely.
Lots of interference and static like a bad cordless phone.
Nobody I knew who owned one really like it.

But I had to have one!!

Next, I turned to IP baby webcams that transmit their signal via Wi-Fi through your home network. I scoured the web for reviews on which cameras would pair up nicely with my Apple ecosystem.

Back in 2010, it seemed most of these cameras were set up to work with PCs and not Macs. Yes, there were some that were designed to play with Apple, but their reviews were mixed.

Plus the set-up seemed complicated. The reviews didn’t mention it, but it was clear that having a Geek membership card was highly recommended.

Finally, a $200 investment for something that likely wouldn’t work?
(They’ve come down in price since then.)
I had diapers and rattles to stock up on!
This was not the time to get adventurous.

A Hole in the Wall
Then I had a flashback to 2004.
Do you remember that distant era which was still mostly devoid of Wi-Fi?
I do.

Eight years ago, I did a little surgery on my house in the name of web connectivity. Back then, if you wanted to get a computer online, it probably needed a hard-wired Ethernet connection.

For reasons I’ll not bore you with, my cable modem was in one room, and I wanted to get an Internet connection to a desktop computer across a little barrier called…

THE WALL

So get this-
When the cable guy arrived to install my cable modem, I told him to drill a hole between the two rooms for the CAT 5 network cable. Was that crazy or what?

And then he happily pulled out a drill bit that must have been two feet long and said,
“Let’s go!”

I still shudder at the memory.

Not long after that, I bought Apple’s Airport Extreme Base Station and brought Wi-Fi into the house.

And of course, the hole now served no purpose.

Everything Old is New Again
Fast forward back to 2010 and the countdown to Baby Lester.
So I had to face the simple reality:
I just didn’t have the energy and the hours to put towards figuring out the Wi-Fi BabyCam equation.

And then I remembered the hole.

The room with the hole was now the nursery.
What if I hard wired a little security camera from the nursery to a small TV in our bedroom?

You know… like the tiny camera that pops out of the ceiling at a convenience store and is connected via cable to a little TV at the register?

Like that.

I can sense all of the 1’s and 0’s in your brain convulsing in repulsion at my archaic idea.

Did anyone even sell this outdated tech anymore?
B&H did.
Fifty bucks.

Sold.

I ran the cable through the wall with the knowing flair of the cable guy who hooks you up with HBO for the first time.

Flicked the switch on the TV.
And there it was… the crib. Waiting.

Time to move on for the big day.

The Skeleton in my Tech Closet
Baby Lester arrived with much fanfare and my technology was in place and ready to go. The IT Guy was a hero! (and a happy new daddy)

For the past two years, my little video umbilical cord has continued to provide countless hours of fun for my wife and me as we’ve watched our little boy sleeping from across the wall.

But the fact remains that I never stretched myself to get an IP webcam solution to work.
Heck, I didn’t even try!
Deep down, the happy home tech bubble that Barrett built has been quietly concealing this disturbing detail, and the guilt has weighed heavy.

For two years, I’ve tried not to think about it.
But the skeleton rattles about in the back of my head from time to time.

Just talking about it here makes me question my very “tech-dentity!”
What kind of home tech authority am I if I don’t even try to get a stinkin’ BabyCam to work?

I feel like I’m the one who needs to be in diapers.

But fate has a way of catching up with you.

The Crusade Begins
Guess what? I got a little present from a friend last week.

From a guy who’s a father to both a toddler and a baby.
And he’s clearly at home with tech.

He’s got a bunch of cool gizmos working for him.
In fact, he had an extra one he didn’t need.
Thought I might have a use for it.

(yeah?)

It was a Foscam Wireless IP Camera (model FI8910W).

(oh)

He whipped out his iPhone and showed me how he had programmed the camera’s live signal to beam to the iPhone.
Via Wi-Fi or 3G. Like magic.
He reholstered the phone and smiled.

I thanked him for the generous gift.
And my pulse began to rise.

Though my stodgy, tethered camera has been doing just fine serving up the Lester Toddler Channel to our bedroom, I knew it was finally time to cut the cord and face my demon.

And so I began my trip down the rabbit hole.
Because I simply had no idea how to install this Foscam IP camera.

So I opened up the instruction manual.
Immediately all went black. Confusion surrounded me.

There was a small disturbance in the Force as all of the world’s geeks collectively sensed the beginning of my surely futile crusade.

I would be facing my Darth Vader, and I simply was not yet ready for the challenge.

I would be confronted with confusing acronyms like DDNS and DHCP.
I would have to understand the ancient Jedi practice of port forwarding.
I would even have to grasp the difference between static and dynamic IP addresses.

This journey would surely break my Tech Zen.
But I had no choice but to continue on and risk it all.

Now that I’ve posted this Part 1, there’s no turning back now!

To be continued…

My Laptop Battery Got Pregnant

Behold my science experiment! This used to be the battery from my 2007 MacBook Pro laptop. But now, I believe I’ve discovered a new life form.

The lithium-ion battery from my old Apple MacBook Pro laptop encountered a massive failure a few weeks back before my family’s beach vacation. Two of the six chemical packs, which comprise the battery’s guts, started growing in size.

Yes, growing.

Take Me to your Leader
One morning I picked up my laptop and noticed a small but unsightly bulge under the unit. A few days later, the battery’s bump got larger and now was also pushing inwards, creating pressure on the computer’s trackpad.

When I tried to use my laptop, the trackpad was frozen from the pressure, rendering the computer somewhat limited. I had no choice but to remove the battery and go on vacation with the computer entirely reliant on its electrical tether.

When we returned home a week later, my battery had mutated into an alien life form and was battling local pest-control agents for rulership of my street.

Okay, it wasn’t that bad, but my swollen battery had certainly been eating its Wheaties.
Now, the top had split open, as the two lithium-ion cell envelopes were continuing to balloon in size. They hadn’t burst open, but I was especially thankful Apple makes its batteries without mercury.

So I decided to make my former power source into a little science experiment.
I want to see how big it would grow.
I sealed it into a Ziploc plastic baggie in case of leakage, cordoned off a section of my house with yellow hazard tape, and waited.

Cause and Effect
Over the next week, its growth slowed, but I did have a lot of time to think.

Had my life just turned into a bad science fiction movie? Usually in those plots, mankind is somehow to blame for the creation of the (fill in the blank) horror.

Did I have something to do with this?

I thought back to the day I spilled coffee all over my desk.
Coffee seepage could certainly be the culprit.
But no, I’m certain my MBP had remained unscathed during that ‘incident.’
I now had access to my battery’s innards, and I could clearly see there was no evidence of a coffee invasion.

Then, later that week, a friend of mine with the same old MBP line told me that he had recently experienced the same problem with his battery.
Coincidence?

Hmmm….

The Truth is Out There
So I powered up my iMac and did a little research.

Apple says on its Notebooks Info Page that its current batteries can last up to five years.

My pregnant battery was… well, already five years old.
So it certainly didn’t die prematurely.

But what about its sudden super nova-like quality?
That particular detail is not in Apple’s literature.

But I did come across some interesting Google results-
First of all, I was not alone.

  • One engineer blamed my battery’s mutation on ‘thermal runaway’ (overheating), which is initiated by a chemically created heat overload.
  • Another tech geek talked about the resulting potential for a fire hazard.
  • Apparently, poor battery charging habits (overcharging) can cause this problem to crop up.
  • So you need to exercise your battery’s electrons and periodically drain the battery and fully recharge it to maintain its healthy condition.

I found other posts written by similarly crippled Apple laptop owners, and I read a blog that even offered a pseudo-serious do it yourself solution called “How to ‘Fix’ a Swollen MacBook Battery.”
It involved rupturing the bloated metal covered envelope with a pin to allow for the release of the pent up gases.

That sounded a wee-bit dodgy. I decided this was an extremely bad idea.
I will NOT be trying this at home (no disrespect to my fellow blogger).

So I continued my research through the X Files.

I burned the midnight oil. I refilled my cup of coffee. (and didn’t spill it)
Then, finally… I spotted it!

I triumphantly uncovered the news that Apple had officially acknowledged the problem back in 2007 with my generation of battery (model number A1189), and issued a recall and replacement program.

What a relief!

How Late is Too Late?
But the replacement program ended in May of 2009.
I was three years too late.
(D’OH!)
Talk about missing the train.

I had completed my little marathon, but there was no one there to greet me at the finish line. (sniffle)

But I did get my five years with the battery.
Time to pony up, buy a new power buddy for my MBP, and move on.

My Ziploc Baggie’s Visit to the Apple Store
So I paid a visit to my conveniently located Apple Store at Grand Central Terminal in New York City.

I sat down at the Genius Bar, explained my situation, and gently pulled the science experiment out of my workbag as if to display a priceless ancient artifact.

The Apple Genius stared at the bulging plastic baggie.

He said, “Yes, I’ve seen that before,” with zero emotion.

“But is it normal to do that?” I replied.

Mr. Spock chose his words very carefully.
“Yes, batteries can react in that way.”

We went through the obligatory diagnostic questions, which simply confirmed the obvious: Because my battery was years beyond its warrantee, I needed to purchase a new one.
Deep down though, I was hoping for a little more from Apple.
(A few web posts from a couple years back had alluded to Apple exceeding expectations when “battery-gate” went down for those Apple customers.)

But- No!
I dared not hope.

Waiting in the Doctor’s Office
The Apple Genius explained I could buy a new battery for $99 at the Genius Bar with a three-month warrantee or purchase a battery in the retail section of the store for $129 with a one-year warrantee.

Despite my “Jabba the Hut” sitting next to me, I had enough faith in Apple that another battery would last beyond three months. I’d happily save the thirty bucks.

“I’ll take the $99 one, please.”

He said he would check for it in the back and quickly disappeared.
Really quick.

Three minutes went by.

I watched a few Apple shoppers typing feverishly on new laptops for sale.
(I think these ‘customers’ were just checking their email.)

Five minutes passed.

I looked around the Genius Bar. There was a man, despondent and watching nervously as another Apple Genius tended to his sick first-generation Apple TV. (Mine is still chugging along.)

Where could my Genius have gone?!

Finally, he reappeared holding a new battery box.
I reached for my wallet.

He looked at me and started talking.
When he was done, he stared at me, waiting for a response.

The problem was… I wasn’t exactly sure what he said.
It was kind of complicated.

Clarity in Confusion
Something about his parts inventory not having the new battery onsite.
But he had located the battery in the retail section.
However, he was unable to sell me the retail battery at the Genius Bar.
He implied it was against the rules.

He could order another battery for me through the Genius Bar, but it would take four or five days to come in, and he didn’t want me to be without my laptop for that long. Plus it was a holiday weekend, and there was plenty of inventory left.

(Are you following any of this?)

And then he asked me to make a choice.
Did I want to pay the retail price or go with the non-retail choice?

I thought for a moment. But there was no non-retail choice.
He just told me he couldn’t sell me the very battery he was holding in his hands!

Exactly.

I looked into his HAL-ish eyes. They offered me nothing.
But deep down, I could tell he was winking at me.

“I’ll take the second thing you just said.”

“Good,” he replied.

He broke open the box and handed me the battery.
And then he took my science experiment.

“Do you mind if I keep the bag?”

“Please do!”

The Exchange
Ladies and Gentlemen, I believe the official designation for what just happened is called an “exchange.”
On the bottom of my Apple Store receipt, there was $129.00, and on the top, there was ($129.00).
That math on that makes- $0.

I shook his hand as he sent me on my way, and I told him that he had made my day.

And then finally, I saw it.
He smiled.

Genius!
So I’ve been thinking a bit about my free replacement battery.
This act of… corporate generosity.
I’m just not used to that kind of thing.
And I’ll never really know why it happened.

Maybe this was Apple’s unofficial way of apologizing five years later for a badly made battery.
Maybe this was an Apple Genius adroitly taking advantage of a glitch in the system.
Maybe Apple purposely creates these ‘windows of opportunity’ for Apple Geniuses to use at their discretion.

Clearly, my Genius exercised his personal sense of responsibility to solve my problem, and then some!
And he was enabled to do this by a company that prides itself on amazing customer service.

All I can do is take two lessons from today’s story:

  • Exercise your electrons
  • And be appreciative when something nice happens

Thank you, Apple.

I am fully recharged!

My iPad Doesn’t Brake for Flash

This PBS report took me just minutes to serve up to my wife during dinner. But as the resident technology chef at home, my meal got burned, because we couldn’t watch the video on our iPad. Whose fault is that?!

I was enjoying a quiet dinner with my wife on Friday night after putting our toddler to bed. Mid course, my wife mentioned an email she received from her brother about a TV report on the important topic of childhood diabetes and obesity his wife produced for the PBS series “Need to Know.”

The show was premiering that evening, and we were invited to tune in. The email also contained a link to the show’s webpage where the video already lived online.

I don’t think I’ve watched any TV in real time over the past year with the exception of some news and the Olympics.
(and that was mostly in ‘pretend’ real time)

Time shifting is really the only way I consume TV content these days. DVR it and watch it later.

But recording “Need to Know” on our cable DVR and watching it sometime the following week seemed like an insufficient response to such a happy email from a family member.

A more immediate response was required.

So I told my wife I would grab the iPad, and we could watch the video online over dessert. What’s faster than that?

Isn’t technology wonderful?
Except when…

I tapped the icon of the video to begin playing on the iPad, and nothing happened.

Oh, yeah. It’s a Flash video.

The IT Guy calmly stated that it was a well-known fact that Apple’s mobile products don’t use Adobe Flash Player, and so they don’t play Flash videos.

The Look
And then we gave each other the look. The look that says, “That’s nice, but it should really just work. We nodded to each other briefly and smiled, acknowledging the problem. We’d been there before.

But deep down, I was miffed.
I know my wife didn’t mind, but the shiny exterior of my home tech kingdom was dinged. And don’t tell her, but so was a little bit of my pride.

But you’ve got to move on.
And I had a back up plan.

I suggested we schlep over to my iMac in the other room to watch the video.
What an inconvenience!
The bananas flambé was ruined.
(It was actually just Trader Joe’s Apple Sauce.)

We proceeded to successfully watch my sister-in-law’s PBS report.

The Future has Arrived?
So, instead of having to go sit on the couch and wait for the PBS show to broadcast later that evening and then wait the for the particular story to run, we watched the report online within minutes of beginning our conversation.
That’s not so bad.

But the promise of today’s technology says we should have been able to do this in seconds through one or two clicks, tops.

Now, I’m not bickering over the loss of a few minutes.
But I could have done without the irritation that the shining beacon of home tech didn’t quite work right for me… again.

It’s 2012, and we’ve just landed on Mars again in a rather stunning fashion.
Did you all watch NASA’s Seven Minutes of Terror on YouTube?
After seeing all that amazing technology in harmony, shouldn’t something as straight forward as this be a non-issue?

Apple vs Adobe
A little history lesson-

In April, 2010, Steve Jobs posted his famous open letter to Adobe regarding his “Thoughts on Flash.”

It explained why Apple didn’t support Flash on Apple’s mobile devices-
Flash didn’t work with touch-based devices. It was a closed platform, created terrible battery life on mobile devices, and had poor reliability, security, and performance.
(Steve Jobs didn’t like Adobe, much.)

After this, Android users jumped up and down with glee, doing their superiority dance, and they happily watched their Flash videos on their Droids.

But last November in a surprise announcement, Adobe said it would no longer develop future versions of the Flash Player for mobile browsers.

What?!!
Android users stopped jumping.

Adobe explained on its blog its decision to abandon Android’s mobile browser-

1- Premium experiences on mobile devices are typically being delivered through apps, and
2- Mobile websites mostly rely on HTML5 based video delivery.

Looks like Apple was right all along.

Adobe decided to focus on HTML5 technology for mobile viewing, which Apple has long supported. (Adobe will still continue to develop desktop versions of its Flash Player.)

So while Androids and BlackBerry PlayBooks still can play Flash-based videos today, that capability now has an expiration date.

The End of Flash for Android
On August 17th, Adobe removed its Flash Player from the Google Play store, which is the beginning of the end.
Existing users running Android 4.0 “Ice Cream Sandwich” will continue to get updates through September 2013.

If you’re one of the few trailblazers who already have Android 4.1 “Jelly Bean,” you’re out of luck now.

Mobile Apps are the Future
So all this said, why do websites still publish Flash-based videos that can’t be viewed on mobile devices?

Shouldn’t these companies all just have mobile versions of their websites to prevent this problem? Or why not just use the right technology for videos that can play on all platforms?

Hello…!? PBS?

Wait a minute… I’m suddenly channeling a likely response –

Just Download the mobile app.
Oh yeah. Everyone’s got one of those, these days.

So a couple days later, I took the iPad and tapped on Apple’s App Store, and of course, there was the PBS app.
I downloaded it, clicked on the “Need to Know” series, and then found the episode with my sister-in-law’s story.

Bam!
There it was, thirty seconds later… playing on the iPad.

My Tech Pecs
The problem with this micro success is that it happened 48 hours after the moment I really needed it.
That particular instant when I wanted to flex my tech pecs in front of my wife.
(Married guys, you know what I mean.)

No one wants to deal with all those extra steps when clicking on a link that’s supposed to just… work. It’s a de-motivator.

The good news is we can redeem ourselves
There are lots more links out there to click on and get right.

Much like life, using home tech can be complicated.
But figuring things out can be fun (even a little), if you allow for it.

Just don’t forget-
Perfection is unnecessary, if you’re already getting it done.
Always have a back up plan.
And never lose site of what’s really important.

Especially on the night before your anniversary.

Enough said.