At Home with Tech

It’s time to maximize the potential of all your gadgets.

Tag: Foscam Wireless IP Camera

More Vacation with Less Tech

For once, the rusted nut I found wasn't the one in my head. Although my noggin did slide into vacation mode about six hours earlier than I would have preferred...

For once, the rusted nut I found wasn’t the one in my head. Although my noggin did slide into vacation mode about six hours earlier than I would have preferred…

I’m just back from a ‘relaxing’ family beach vacation at a cottage in the North Fork of Long Island… And let me just quickly admit that along with my favorite pair of flip-flops, I accidentally left most of my tech smarts at home.
(It doesn’t help when you pack your tech at the last minute, and you’ve got a ferry to catch!)

Not to pass the buck, but some bad Tech Karma also played a role in what was to come next…

Movie Night Cancelled
I brought along our brand new Apple Lightning Digital AV Adapter to conveniently stream videos from my iPhone onto the cottage’s resident HDTV. But it ended up being an older TV without an HDMI output. So my plan to project videos onto a big screen for a larger crowd was foiled…

No Rocking the House
Then, I realized I had forgotten to bring my portable Bluetooth speaker (Logitech UE Mobile Boombox) to stream Pandora tunes off of my iPhone.
(D’oh!)

That said, the house did have one of those formerly-cool clock radios with an iPhone dock, but again, it was an older model with the old 30-pin connector…not the current Lightning connection my iPhone 6 Plus uses.
(Foiled again!)

Dangerous Beach Exposure
I also forgot to bring my son’s cheap, but waterproof ‘family’ COOLPIX S32 Nikon camera to use on the beach.
(When a typical pocket camera with a motor-driven zoom lens gets exposed to a sandy environment, it can get destroyed by a single grain of sand jamming into the wrong spot.)

Instead, I threw caution to the wind and brought along my aging Canon S100 advanced point and shoot.
(On the upside, it survived and took much better pics than the tough but mediocre Nikon ever could.)

I should also admit my iPhone 6 Plus satisfactorily handled its share of beach-time photo taking… The camera functionality was amazingly zippy, which was useful when my five year old brought over the latest hermit crab he just caught!
(But I was careful not to go too close to the water with my iPhone… An accidental drop in the drink would have really ruined the day!)

Home Alone
Even though my limited vacation brain and a touch of bad luck sidelined a bit of fun, all of my smart-home gear thankfully remained fully on duty. Back at the homestead, this tech did a stellar job keeping me informed that our home was indeed comfortable without any resident humans.

Nest Thermostat Keeps Its Cool
I’m always conflicted about whether to leave the windows open or closed before leaving on a late August vacation. Warm days and cool nights can be a perfect combination for a few open windows to successfully ventilate your house. But if a thunderstorm rolls through, those open windows will welcome in some damaging moisture you’re not around to wipe up…

And if you decide to batten down the hatches, you have to choose between letting your house get all hot and humid without air conditioning or running your AC and feel like you’re throwing money out the (closed) window…

Unless…

With my smart Nest Learning Thermostat, I was able to monitor my house’s internal temperature on my iPhone and remotely turn on the AC at night for a couple of hours if I felt my home needed it.
Sure, any programmable ‘dumb’ thermostat can handle that directive, but I’ve got to admit that having the flexibility to manually control the AC from the Nest app on my iPhone felt amazing.

Nest Connect Glows Green
My Nest app also showed me the happy ‘green circle’ status of my Nest Connect smoke detector. So I was pretty sure my house wasn’t burning down in my absence…

Foscam Camera Keeps Track
And while we’re talking about managing a few ‘irrational’ fears while vacationing…
Remember that Foscam Wi-Fi BabyCam I installed when my now kindergarten-bound boy was just a wee lad in his crib? Well, I’ve given my Foscam a new mission…

Now, the BabyCam just serves as a resident pair of digital eyes (well, just one) when nobody’s home. The FoscamPro app on my iPhone allows me to quickly take a look about whenever I want.

No, I couldn’t see throughout the entire house while simultaneously viewing the beach sunsets.
(I could if I had multiple Foscam cameras set up.)
But it’s still another data point that my house was remaining healthy all by itself.

Vacation Scoop
So I’m pleased to report my house had a wonderful vacation.
And as for me…?

I’m writing this final paragraph on my last full day away…

  • The sun is rising as I look out over the magical inlet in front of me.
  • The warmth of the sun joins the crisp morning beach air.
  • I’ve got my cup of Joe.

Perfection.
(I have found my Vacation Zen.)

Cup of Beach Joe

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And I’m happy to admit there was absolutely no technology connected to the moment above.
…Except for the little detail that I was tapping away on my iPhone…
(D’oh!)

It’s good to know that you can be at home without tech.
(Almost…)

I Don’t Know How to Install my Wireless IP Camera, Part 2

Call it what you like – Tech Death Match or IT Smack Down. This Foscam BabyCam will be operating in our nursury by the end of this post or else! Need
“How-To” directions? You’ve come to the right place.

Previously on At Home with Tech,
Barrett decides to replace his old-school BabyCam system, and hooks up a cutting-edge Foscam Wireless IP Camera (Model F18910W). He plans on using the powerful conduit of his Apple Airport Extreme’s Wi-Fi home network to carry the video and audio signal of his sleeping toddler.

But the installation manual is gobbly gook.
And Barrett is flummoxed on how to do the install.

Will he find his answers online?
Will he be able to navigate conflicting suggestions by other Home IT Guys?
Or will failure jeopardize his very “Tech-Dentity?”

One thing’s for sure.
There’s no turning back now…

Foscam Installation or Bust!
First, I need to offer up a little disclaimer.
My friend who gave me the evil black eye (camera) recommended I call Foscam tech support if I had any problems hooking up the sleek but confusing IP device.
And did I do that?
No.
Why? Let’s just say I wanted to be able to figure it out for myself.
Maybe it’s a guy thing. Like asking for directions.
(It’s a discussion for another day.)

Web Wandering
Let me ruin my cliffhanger and joyfully report that my little tech project does have a happy ending. It just took me the better part of a week to get there.

I had to piece together the puzzle with bits of information from a variety of websites to get the whole kit and kaboodle to work. I found no central source.

Hopefully my experience will be of value to other Foscam owners wandering the web looking for answers.

Yes, I was right about how crazy hard it is to set this kind of tech up.
And two years ago wasn’t the time to crack this code.
Preparing for parenthood wouldn’t have allowed me the necessary discretionary focus. I can see that now.

Hey, what’s that sparkly feeling I feel rushing over my face?
It’s all that Tech Guilt…
Evaporating.
(nice)

My Manual Begins
The remainder of this post is the manual I feel should have been in the box.
But beware. I’m going to be throwing about a lot of acronyms.
And this how-to post is only designed for an Apple ecosystem using a current edition Apple Airport Extreme wireless router.

Are you still there?
(Cue the “Jeopardy!” music.)

Great!
For those of you who are left, thanks for taking this rigorous journey with me.
Let’s get started!

The Glossary
First, you should familiarize yourself with some acronyms.
Please tell your agitated neurons not to explode.
(You can also refer to this later. I won’t tell.)

• IP Address = Internet Protocol Address
It a unique location identifier that works like a mailing address for computers and other devices to find each other on the web.

• DNS = Domain Name System
This service manages and translates impossible-to-remember IP addresses into normal URL names.

• DDNS = Dynamic DNS
Similar to DNS, but this system handles dynamic IP addresses that change from time to time. To address this problem, you can download DDNS software to your computer to update the correct DNS mapping to your URL.

• DHCP = Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
This network protocol is used by your Apple Airport Extreme router to assign a range of private IP address numbers to different devices running on your network.

• MAC Address = Media Access Control Address (not an Apple term!)
Like your social security number, each of your web-connected devices has a MAC Address hard-wired into it. One way to identify your Foscam MAC address is to download LanScan onto your computer. It’s a free program you’ll find in Apple’s App Store.

Chapter 1: Get your Foscam Camera Working in Wireless Mode
When you first log your camera into your home Wi-Fi network, you’ll have to hardwire it to your router to log it in. (like a temporary umbilical cord)
The trick is to activate its wireless mode to work with your Wi-Fi home network.

TIP:
When you reboot your Foscam to activate its wireless mode, you must quickly unplug the Ethernet cable before the camera completes its reboot. Otherwise it will incorrectly reestablish its connection via the cable and WILL NOT FIND your Wi-Fi signal when you pull out the cable later.

Chapter 2: Lock Your Home Network’s Dynamic IP Address Assigned to the Foscam
Once I had my Foscam up and running in the nursery and viewable on my iMac’s Safari browser, I quickly realized my Foscam viewer software asked me to keep re-logging in every day or so.

What was up with that?!

My Airport Extreme (like all routers) is given only one external IP address to work with. That IP address is provided by my internet service provider (ISP) and has to be shared with all my web-enabled devices when connecting up my army of tech.

But remember, each device needs its own unique web location identifier.
So the Apple router ends up assigning its own series of internal dynamic IP addresses to my web-connected tech.

The problem was the router-assigned internal dynamic IP address for my Foscam kept changing, forcing me to re-log back into it.

TIP:
Create a Static DHCP Reservation for the Foscam in your internal home network that won’t keep changing on you.

The Mac Observer has a great story on how to do this.
I found it especially valuable, because there’s not a lot out there on how to get Apple’s current Airport Utility (V6.1) to work with an IP camera.

That said, I did have one problem with this article. I couldn’t change the default DCHP Range as per the instructions. So I picked a number, reserved it, and hoped my router will know not use try to reuse it. (Isn’t that what a “reservation” means?)

Chapter 3: Don’t Stress over your ISP’s Dynamic IP Address
As I mentioned above, home internet users are assigned one dynamic IP address by their ISP. For me, it’s provided by Optimum (Cablevision). And yes, static IP addresses are available, but cost more.

So the external dynamic IP address Optimum assigned to my service changes from time to time.

We’ve just addressed the similar problem when accessing the Foscam on a home Wi-Fi network. But when you’re elsewhere and want to take a peek at your toddler, you’ll need to ping the Foscam via your external dynamic IP address. And that number is always changing.

That problem makes it hard for my Foscam Pro iPhone app ($3.99 in Apple’s App Store) to find my baby cam when I’m out and about.

The solution is to use a free DDNS service to assign a static host name to your dynamic IP address that won’t keep changing on you.

I signed up for an account with no-ip.com.
(My Foscam manual suggested using dyndns.com, but DynDNS no longer offers free accounts! D’oh!!)

You might think it’s great to have a static name instead of an ever-changing series of IP numbers for your Foscam.
But how does the host name know to keep up with the changing numbers?

Good question.

You’ve also got to download and install software that’s designed to track the changing numbers.
No-IP calls it the Dynamic DNS Update Client or Mac DUC for short.
(That’s much easier to remember!)
And as long as the software is running on your computer, it will sense your IP address change and update the current DNS address associated with your new static name.

Ugh.
Another program to run on my computer. I’m never a big fan of introducing software that always has to run the background.

Throughout my agonizing week of Foscam-Palooza, I noticed my dynamic IP address from Optimum only changed once.
So I’ve decided to delay this step, and I have not yet created a new host name for my IP address with No-IP. I will deal with this pesky problem at some point down the line.
For now, I will keep checking for changes to my IP address, which I do by going to-
www.whatismyip.com

I will then have to manually update the new IP addresses into Foscam Pro on our family’s two iPhones.

Not a perfect solution, but it works for now.

TIP:
Don’t bother with the whole DDNS thing. Do the DNS updates manually. You can always set up the auto-checking software later.

Chapter 4: Port Forwarding or Bust
No choice here.
This step you have to do to get Foscam Pro working without the safety net of Wi-Fi.

So what is port forwarding?
It’s when one internet device communicates directly with another, using a specific port number. The Foscam’s default is port 80, a commonly used port.
All of my research says you should change it to a less travelled port number to avoid conflicts with other devices also using port 80. And sometimes ISPs block port 80; another reason not to use it.

Finally, my Foscam Pro iPhone App says point blank: “Don’t use Port 80!”

TIP: Assign a port number other than 80 for your Foscam to use.

Show Me the Money!
Okay. If you’ve gotten this far, you must be serious.
Here’s my bonus ‘quick start’ guide.
(You’re welcome.)

It’s step-by-step detail on how to get your almost-awesome Foscam IP Camera up and running once it’s happily humming on your home network using Apple’s Airport Extreme router and Airport Utility V6.1.

STEP 1:
Log in to your Foscam’s Device Management Page in Safari.

  1. Go to the “Basic Network Settings” field
  2. Change “Http Port” from 80 to another number
    (Foscam Pro recommends 8502-8599.)
  3. Press “Submit” and allow your Foscam to reboot

STEP 2:
Open Airport Utility on your Apple Computer.
(It’s in your Utilities folder, which is in your Applications folder)

  1. Click the “Network” tab
  2. Click “Network Options” at the bottom
  3. Make sure “Enable NAT Port Mapping Protocol” is checked
  4. Click “Save” which takes you back to where you were…
  5. Click the “+” under “DHCP Reservations”
  6. In the “Description” field-
    Type in the name you want to call your device
  7. In the “Reserve Address By” dropdown-
    Select – “Choose MAC Address”
  8. In the MAC Address field-
    Type in your MAC address, which you can find with LanScan (see glossery)
  9. In “IPv4 Address” field-
    Type the DHCP number you’d like to reserve as a static address for your Airport Extreme to use
  10. Click “Save”
  11. Then click the “+” “under “Port Settings”
  12. In “Description,” select FTP access from the drop down
    (I know this may not be technically correct, but there isn’t a camera-related option.
    And it did work!)
  13. In the “Private IP Address” field-
    Type in the same DHCP number you used in the DHCP Reservations section
  14. In the four other fields that list private and public port options-
    Type in your new port number that you earlier gave to your Foscam to use
    (I punted here by filling in all the port fields, but the “throw spaghetti at the wall” approach seemed to cover me.)
  15. Click “Save”

That’s it.

STEP 3:
Purchase and Download Foscam Pro onto your iPhone or iPad.

  1. Launch the app.
  2. On the bottom left of the app, click the “+” to add a new camera
  3. In the “Name” field-
    Type in the name of your choice
  4. In the “Remote Camera Address” fields-
    Type in your computer’s external IP address and your new port number you assigned to your Foscam
    Again, you can find your IP address by going to-
    http://www.whatismyip.com
  5. In the “Local Camera Address” fields-
    Type in your static internal IP address your reserved in Airport Utility and your new port number
  6. In the “User Name” and “Password” fields-
    Type in your Foscam sign-in info
  7. Then choose your camera model

Then…. VOILA!
You should now be able to view your Foscam feed on your iPhone from anywhere, day or night! (Don’t forget to use the camera’s infrared nighttime mode.)

Anyone Still There?
Easy-breezy stuff, right?
I know. Not so much.

So I hope I’ve been of some assistance.
(If there are other/better solutions out there, please share!)

I publicly admit I’m outside my tech comfort zone, and my solutions are only one guy’s humble opinion. (I bow my head in deference to more proficient tech heads out there whose domain this type of conversation normally belongs.)

But sometimes you’ve to figure things out for yourself!
Especially when you’ve got no choice but to write the manual yourself.

Face Your Darth
All in all, it’s not been a totally horrible experience.
(though it did take me two years to attempt it)

So get off the barcalounger and go run around in the wild a bit.
(I highly recommend it.)
Confront the Dark Side, and tickle it until it gives up its secrets!

I’m happy to report my Tech-Dentity has remained intact.

My solutions may not be bulletproof, but they work! (for now)
And that, my friends, is all that matters.

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…

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